TY - JOUR
T1 - Strategies for equitable pharmacogenomic-guided warfarin dosing among European and African American individuals in a clinical population
AU - Wiley, Laura K.
AU - Vanhouten, Jacob P.
AU - Samuels, David C.
AU - Aldrich, Melinda C.
AU - Roden, Dan M.
AU - Peterson, Josh F.
AU - Denny, Joshua C.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017, World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - The blood thinner warfarin has a narrow therapeutic range and high inter-and intra-patient variability in therapeutic doses. Several studies have shown that pharmacogenomic variants help predict stable warfarin dosing. However, retrospective and randomized controlled trials that employ dosing algorithms incorporating pharmacogenomic variants under perform in African Americans. This study sought to determine if: 1) including additional variants associated with warfarin dose in African Americans, 2) predicting within single ancestry groups rather than a combined population, or 3) using percentage African ancestry rather than observed race, would improve warfarin dosing algorithms in African Americans. Using BioVU, the Vanderbilt University Medical Center biobank linked to electronic medical records, we compared 25 modeling strategies to existing algorithms using a cohort of 2,181 warfarin users (1,928 whites, 253 blacks). We found that approaches incorporating additional variants increased model accuracy, but not in clinically significant ways. Race stratification increased model fidelity for African Americans, but the improvement was small and not likely to be clinically significant. Use of percent African ancestry improved model fit in the context of race misclassification.
AB - The blood thinner warfarin has a narrow therapeutic range and high inter-and intra-patient variability in therapeutic doses. Several studies have shown that pharmacogenomic variants help predict stable warfarin dosing. However, retrospective and randomized controlled trials that employ dosing algorithms incorporating pharmacogenomic variants under perform in African Americans. This study sought to determine if: 1) including additional variants associated with warfarin dose in African Americans, 2) predicting within single ancestry groups rather than a combined population, or 3) using percentage African ancestry rather than observed race, would improve warfarin dosing algorithms in African Americans. Using BioVU, the Vanderbilt University Medical Center biobank linked to electronic medical records, we compared 25 modeling strategies to existing algorithms using a cohort of 2,181 warfarin users (1,928 whites, 253 blacks). We found that approaches incorporating additional variants increased model accuracy, but not in clinically significant ways. Race stratification increased model fidelity for African Americans, but the improvement was small and not likely to be clinically significant. Use of percent African ancestry improved model fit in the context of race misclassification.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85015584669
U2 - 10.1142/9789813207813_0050
DO - 10.1142/9789813207813_0050
M3 - Conference article
C2 - 27897005
AN - SCOPUS:85015584669
SN - 2335-6928
VL - 0
SP - 545
EP - 556
JO - Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing
JF - Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing
IS - 212679
T2 - 22nd Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing, PSB 2017
Y2 - 4 January 2017 through 8 January 2017
ER -