Value of Pharmacogenetic Testing Assessed with Real-World Drug Utilization and Genotype Data
Litonius, Kaisa; Kulla, Noora; Falkenbach, Petra; Kristiansson, Kati; Tarkiainen, E. Katriina; Ukkola-Vuoti, Liisa; Cajanus, Kristiina; Korhonen, Mari; Khan, Sofia; Sistonen, Johanna; Orpana, Arto; Lindstedt, Mats; Nyronen, Tommi; Perola, Markus; Turpeinen, Miia; Kyto, Ville; Tornio, Aleksi; Niemi, Mikko
Value of Pharmacogenetic Testing Assessed with Real-World Drug Utilization and Genotype Data
Litonius, Kaisa
Kulla, Noora
Falkenbach, Petra
Kristiansson, Kati
Tarkiainen, E. Katriina
Ukkola-Vuoti, Liisa
Cajanus, Kristiina
Korhonen, Mari
Khan, Sofia
Sistonen, Johanna
Orpana, Arto
Lindstedt, Mats
Nyronen, Tommi
Perola, Markus
Turpeinen, Miia
Kyto, Ville
Tornio, Aleksi
Niemi, Mikko
WILEY
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025082786989
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025082786989
Tiivistelmä
Implementation of pharmacogenetic testing in clinical care has been slow and with few exceptions is hindered by the lack of real-world evidence on how to best target testing. In this retrospective register-based study, we analyzed a nationwide cohort of 1,425,000 patients discharged from internal medicine or surgical wards and a cohort of 2,178 university hospital patients for purchases and prescriptions of pharmacogenetically actionable drugs. Pharmacogenetic variants were obtained from whole genome genotype data for a subset (n = 930) of the university hospital patients. We investigated factors associated with receiving pharmacogenetically actionable drugs and developed a literature-based cost-benefit model for pre-emptive pharmacogenetic panel testing. In a 2-year follow-up, 60.4% of the patients in the nationwide cohort purchased at least one pharmacogenetically actionable drug, most commonly ibuprofen (25.0%) and codeine (19.4%). Of the genotyped subset, 98.8% carried at least one actionable pharmacogenetic genotype and 23.3% had at least one actionable gene-drug pair. Patients suffering from musculoskeletal or cardiovascular diseases were more prone to receive pharmacogenetically actionable drugs during inpatient episode. The cost-benefit model included frequently dispensed drugs in the university hospital cohort, comprising ondansetron (19.4%), simvastatin (7.4%), clopidogrel (5.0%), warfarin (5.1%), (es)citalopram (5.3%), and azathioprine (0.5%). For untargeted pre-emptive pharmacogenetic testing of all university hospital patients, the model indicated saving 17.49 in direct healthcare system costs per patient in 2 years without accounting for the cost of the test itself. Therefore, it might be reasonable to target pre-emptive pharmacogenetic testing to patient groups most likely to receive pharmacogenetically actionable drugs.
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