Jordan I King, Sharma Shivam, Nagar Shashwat Deepali, Mariño-Ramírez Leonardo
School of Biological Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
IHRC-Georgia Tech Applied Bioinformatics Laboratory, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Med Res Arch. 2022 Sep;10(9). doi: 10.18103/mra.v10i9.2986. Epub 2022 Sep 20.
Fifty years ago, Richard Lewontin found that the vast majority of human genetic variation falls within (85%) rather than between (15%) racial groups. This result has been replicated numerous times since and is widely taken to support the notion that genetic differences between racial groups are trivial and thus irrelevant for clinical decision-making. The aim of this study was to consider how the apportionment of pharmacogenomic variation within and between racial and ethnic groups relates to risk disparities for adverse drug reactions. We confirmed that the majority of pharmacogenomic variation falls within (97.3%) rather than between (2.78%) the three largest racial and ethnic groups in the United States: Black, Hispanic, and White. Nevertheless, pharmacogenomic variants showing far greater within than between-group variation can have high predictive value for adverse drug reactions, particularly for minority racial and ethnic groups. We predicted excess adverse drug reactions for minority Black and Hispanic groups, compared to the majority White group, and considered these results in light of the apportionment of genetic variation within and between groups. For 85% within and 15% between group variation, there are 700 excess adverse drug reactions per 1,000 patients predicted for a recessive effect model and 300 for a dominant model. We found high numbers of predicted Black and Hispanic excess adverse drug reactions for widely prescribed platinum chemotherapy compounds, such as cisplatin and oxaliplatin, as well as controlled narcotics, including fentanyl and tramadol. Our results indicate that race and ethnicity, while imprecise proxies for genetic diversity, correlate with patterns of pharmacogenomic variation in a way that is clearly relevant to medical treatment decisions. The effects of this variation is particularly pronounced for Black and Hispanic minority groups, owing to genetic differences from the majority White group. Treatment decisions that are made based on (assumed) White pharmacogenomic variant frequencies can be harmful for minority groups. Ignoring clinically relevant genetic differences among racial and ethnic groups, however well-intentioned, will exacerbate rather than ameliorate health disparities.
五十年前,理查德·莱翁汀发现,绝大多数人类基因变异存在于种族群体内部(约85%)而非群体之间(约15%)。自那以后,这一结果被多次重复验证,并被广泛用于支持这样一种观点,即种族群体之间的基因差异微不足道,因此与临床决策无关。本研究的目的是探讨种族和族裔群体内部及之间的药物基因组变异分配与药物不良反应风险差异之间的关系。我们证实,在美国最大的三个种族和族裔群体(黑人、西班牙裔和白人)中,大多数药物基因组变异存在于群体内部(97.3%)而非群体之间(2.78%)。然而,那些在群体内部变异远大于群体之间变异的药物基因组变异,对于药物不良反应可能具有很高的预测价值,尤其是对少数种族和族裔群体而言。与占多数的白人群体相比,我们预测少数族裔黑人及西班牙裔群体中会出现更多的药物不良反应,并根据群体内部和群体之间的基因变异分配情况来考虑这些结果。对于85%的群体内部变异和15%的群体之间变异,在隐性效应模型下,每1000名患者预计会有700例额外的药物不良反应,显性模型下则为300例。我们发现,对于广泛使用的铂类化疗药物,如顺铂和奥沙利铂,以及包括芬太尼和曲马多在内的管制类麻醉药品,预计黑人及西班牙裔群体中会出现大量额外的药物不良反应。我们的研究结果表明,种族和族裔虽然是基因多样性的不精确代表,但与药物基因组变异模式相关,而这种相关性显然与医疗决策有关。由于与占多数的白人群体存在基因差异,这种变异对黑人和西班牙裔少数群体的影响尤为明显。基于(假定的)白人药物基因组变异频率做出的治疗决策可能对少数群体有害。忽视种族和族裔群体之间临床相关的基因差异——无论初衷多么善意——都将加剧而非改善健康差距。