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Browsing by Author "Parker, Alexander S."
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Item Correction: Nelson et al. UGT1A1 Guided Cancer Therapy: Review of the Evidence and Considerations for Clinical Implementation. Cancers 2021, 13, 1566(MDPI, 2024-10-25) Nelson, Ryan S.; Seligson, Nathan D.; Bottiglieri, Sal; Carballido, Estrella; Del Cueto, Alex; Imanirad, Iman; Levine, Richard; Parker, Alexander S.; Swain, Sandra M.; Tillman, Emma M.; Hicks, J. Kevin; Pharmacology and Toxicology, School of MedicineItem Design and Rationale of GUARDD-US: A pragmatic, randomized trial of genetic testing for APOL1 and pharmacogenomic predictors of antihypertensive efficacy in patients with hypertension(Elsevier, 2022) Eadon, Michael T.; Cavanaugh, Kerri L.; Orlando, Lori A.; Christian, David; Chakraborty, Hrishikesh; Steen-Burrell, Kady-Ann; Merrill, Peter; Seo, Janet; Hauser, Diane; Singh, Rajbir; Maynor Beasley, Cherry; Fuloria, Jyotsna; Kitzman, Heather; Parker, Alexander S.; Ramos, Michelle; Ong, Henry H.; Elwood, Erica N.; Lynch, Sheryl E.; Clermont, Sabrina; Cicali, Emily J.; Starostik, Petr; Pratt, Victoria M.; Nguyen, Khoa A.; Rosenman, Marc B.; Calman, Neil S.; Robinson, Mimsie; Nadkarni, Girish N.; Madden, Ebony B.; Kucher, Natalie; Volpi, Simona; Dexter, Paul R.; Skaar, Todd C.; Johnson, Julie A.; Cooper-DeHoff, Rhonda M.; Horowitz, Carol R.; GUARDD-US Investigators; Medicine, School of MedicineRationale and objective: APOL1 risk alleles are associated with increased cardiovascular and chronic kidney disease (CKD) risk. It is unknown whether knowledge of APOL1 risk status motivates patients and providers to attain recommended blood pressure (BP) targets to reduce cardiovascular disease. Study design: Multicenter, pragmatic, randomized controlled clinical trial. Setting and participants: 6650 individuals with African ancestry and hypertension from 13 health systems. Intervention: APOL1 genotyping with clinical decision support (CDS) results are returned to participants and providers immediately (intervention) or at 6 months (control). A subset of participants are re-randomized to pharmacogenomic testing for relevant antihypertensive medications (pharmacogenomic sub-study). CDS alerts encourage appropriate CKD screening and antihypertensive agent use. Outcomes: Blood pressure and surveys are assessed at baseline, 3 and 6 months. The primary outcome is change in systolic BP from enrollment to 3 months in individuals with two APOL1 risk alleles. Secondary outcomes include new diagnoses of CKD, systolic blood pressure at 6 months, diastolic BP, and survey results. The pharmacogenomic sub-study will evaluate the relationship of pharmacogenomic genotype and change in systolic BP between baseline and 3 months. Results: To date, the trial has enrolled 3423 participants. Conclusions: The effect of patient and provider knowledge of APOL1 genotype on systolic blood pressure has not been well-studied. GUARDD-US addresses whether blood pressure improves when patients and providers have this information. GUARDD-US provides a CDS framework for primary care and specialty clinics to incorporate APOL1 genetic risk and pharmacogenomic prescribing in the electronic health record.Item UGT1A1 Guided Cancer Therapy: Review of the Evidence and Considerations for Clinical Implementation(MDPI, 2021-03-29) Nelson, Ryan S.; Seligson, Nathan D.; Bottiglieri, Sal; Carballido, Estrella; Del Cueto, Alex; Imanirad, Iman; Levine, Richard; Parker, Alexander S.; Swain, Sandra M.; Tillman, Emma M.; Hicks, J. Kevin; Medicine, School of MedicineMulti-gene assays often include UGT1A1 and, in certain instances, may report associated toxicity risks for irinotecan, belinostat, pazopanib, and nilotinib. However, guidance for incorporating UGT1A1 results into therapeutic decision-making is mostly lacking for these anticancer drugs. We summarized meta-analyses, genome-wide association studies, clinical trials, drug labels, and guidelines relating to the impact of UGT1A1 polymorphisms on irinotecan, belinostat, pazopanib, or nilotinib toxicities. For irinotecan, UGT1A1*28 was significantly associated with neutropenia and diarrhea, particularly with doses ≥ 180 mg/m2, supporting the use of UGT1A1 to guide irinotecan prescribing. The drug label for belinostat recommends a reduced starting dose of 750 mg/m2 for UGT1A1*28 homozygotes, though published studies supporting this recommendation are sparse. There was a correlation between UGT1A1 polymorphisms and pazopanib-induced hepatotoxicity, though further studies are needed to elucidate the role of UGT1A1-guided pazopanib dose adjustments. Limited studies have investigated the association between UGT1A1 polymorphisms and nilotinib-induced hepatotoxicity, with data currently insufficient for UGT1A1-guided nilotinib dose adjustments.