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Personalized Medicine James Weis and Lily Chan

Personalized Medicine James Weis and Lily Chan. Personalized medicine takes into account individual genetic differences Traditionally, doctors used: Family history Socioeconomic circumstances Environmental factors Now: genomic/genetic testing proteomic profiling

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Personalized Medicine James Weis and Lily Chan

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  1. Personalized Medicine James Weis and Lily Chan

  2. Personalized medicine takes into account individual genetic differences • Traditionally, doctors used: • Family history • Socioeconomic circumstances • Environmental factors • Now: • genomic/genetic testing • proteomic profiling • metabolomic analysis (study metabolites)

  3. Effectiveness of drugs:

  4. Danger of drugs: • 6.7% of patients in hospitals experience serious drug reactions

  5. Old Paradigm:

  6. New Paradigm:

  7. Future Paradigm:

  8. Personalized Medicine Today

  9. The Plan

  10. The Plan:

  11. The Plan:

  12. IT/CS Challenges Medical Challenges Biological Challenges Engineering Challenges

  13. P.M.

  14. Breather… (whew)

  15. Gene Sequencing / Testing • RFLP analysis • SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms)More than 1.4 million SNPs were identified in the initial sequencing of the human genome, with over 60,000 of them in the coding region of genes (Evans and McLeod 2003). • (but even silent mutations can affect phenotype)

  16. The accuracy of DTC genome-scan tests has been questioned, but Venter et al. found that the genotypes, or particular DNA bases observed, of an individual’s markers from 23andMe and Navigenics agreed more than 99.7% of the time. Same for most other tests.

  17. Do predicted disease risks have any clinical validity? • Genotype-phenotype correlation? What the tests do disagree on, however, is the disease risk… • Certain disease risks can be better predicted than others.

  18. Pharmacogenomics Does one size really fit all?

  19. Pharmacogenetics • Study of genetic variation that gives rise to different responses to drugs • It is estimated that genetics can account for 20 to 95 percent of variability in drug disposition and effects. • Nongenetic factors include: age, organ function, concomitant therapy, drug interactions, and the nature of the disease.

  20. Pharmacogenomics – Under the PM Umbrella • Better medication choices • 100,000 Americans die annually and 2,000,000+ are hospitalized due to adverse reactions to medications • Predict individual reactions to dugs • Safer dosing options • More exact dosing, optimum result/side effect balance • Improvements in drug development • Exclude genetic variations from certain clinical trials, speeding up drug design time

  21. Polygenic Determinants of Drug Response Differences in drug sensitivity and renal clearance Nine possible combinations of drug-metabolism and drug-receptor genotypes and the corresponding drug-response phenotypes. Each yields a different therapeutic index (efficacy:toxicity ratios) ranging from 13 (65 percent:5 percent) to 0.125 (10 percent:80 percent). http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/348/6/538

  22. Proteomic Profiling • Relevant in the identification and predisposition to disease • Josh’s presentation

  23. Metabolomic Analysis • First from urine analysis • Networks of metabolite feedback pathways regulate gene and protein expression. Metabolites also can mediate signaling between organisms. • Biomarkers of disease (diagnostics) • The metabolome is therefore most predictive of phenotype (Fiehn 2002; Weckwerth 2003). • However, “…an understanding of the resulting data is limited owing to a fundamental lack of biochemical and physiological knowledge about network organization…”

  24. Metabolomic Analysis Metabolite target analysis Metabolic profiling Metabolomics Metabolite fingerprinting focus on one specific metabolite group of metabolites, i.e those associated with a specific pathway. Extraction method (capillary electrophoresis, gas or liquid chromatography) specially designed for compounds in class to eliminate unwanted/ irrelevant metabolites. all metabolites, present in a cell or sample. Comprehensive analysis of entire metabolome under a given set of conditions. the intention is not to identify each observed compound but to compare patterns or fingerprints of metabolites that change in response to disease or toxin exposure. Use statistical tools to look for major differences. http://swift.cmbi.ru.nl/euroschool/meta_seminar1.pdf

  25. dynamic static

  26. Applications of Personalized Medicine Some brief case studies

  27. Personalized medicine todayyesterday • Cytochrome P450 genotyping test • Enzyme group ‘cytochrome P450’ (CYP450 • Many types of medications(including antidepressents, anticoagulants, proton pump inhibitors, etc) • Determine dosing and effects of these drugs. • Thiopurinemethyltransferase test • Thiopurine • Thiopurinemethyltransferase (TPMT) • UGT1A1 TA repeat genotype test • Irinotecan (Camptosar) • UGT1A1 enzyme • Dihydropyrimidinedehydrogenase test • 5-flourouracil (5-FU) • Dihydropyrimidinedehydrogenase enzyme • Responsible for breaking down 5-FU

  28. Uses in Muscular Dystrophy: • Becker and Duchenne MD – same family of disease; Duchenne’s more severe than Becker’s because generally the reading frame is preserved in BMD while it is not in DMD. • DMD – death around age 20; BMD – life expectancy may be reduced, but some have a normal life span. Severity partially depends on mutation. • Dystrophin is the largest known gene in the human body, located on the X chromosome. • 79 exons • ~15% caused by premature stop codons • Phenotype-genotypecorrelation studies

  29. Gentamicin treatment in DMD/BMD • Aminoglycoside antibiotic synthesized by Micromonospora • Works by binding the 30S subunit (inhibition site) of the bacterial ribosome, interrupting protein synthesis (stop codon readthrough) Gentamicin treatment of Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy due to nonsense mutations. (Wagner et al 2001) • Some success in mdx mouse model – suppressed truncation of protein and improved phenotype. • Cons: highly nephrotoxic; can have psychiatric side effects.

  30. Ataluren (PTC-124) and PRO051 • Mutation specific • Both aim to restore reading frame: • Ataluren does this through ribosomal stop codon readthrough • PRO051 does this through exon skipping (block splicing machinery) Duchenne  Becker phenotype

  31. Ataluren mechanism • Nonsense mutations result in a premature stop codon (UAG, UAA, or UGA) and cause a truncated protein. • Works best on UGA stop codon. Concept applicable to other diseases that also result from nonsense mutations, such as cystic fibrosis and nonsense-mutation hemophilia A and B (nmHA/B).

  32. As mentioned before, only ~15% have nonsense mutations. Others have deletions, inversions, insertions, point mutations that do not result in a stop codon… • Many specific sequences will be required for effectively treating the majority of patients with DMD. Will each specific sequence need to go through full testing required by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)? • Toxicity standards?

  33. Analysis of Dystrophin Deletion Mutations Predicts Age of Cardiomyopathy Onset in Becker Muscular Dystrophy

  34. Irinotecan • Treatment for cancer that works by inhibiting topoisomerase 1, which prevents DNA from unwinding. • Clinical studies have revealed significant associations between UGT1A1*28 and irinotecan toxicity. • A recommended strategy for irinotecan-dose adjustments based on individual genetic factors has not yet been fully established.

  35. Selzentry™ (Pfizer) • CCR5-tropic HIV treatment (CD4 immune cells) • Ineffective for CXCR4-tropic strains of HIV • Trofile ™ assay to determine patients strain of HIV • Detect virus that does not act through CCR5 at levels as low as 0.3% of a viral population • Clinical trial patients selected with Trofile ™ assay

  36. “The Food and Drug Administration, in a harbinger of likely future actions, has just approved a drug-diagnostic combination for AIDS patients who are running out of treatment options … the hallmark of personalized medicine.” Edward AbrahamsPersonalized Medicine Coalition, 2007

  37. The End Or is it just the beginning?...

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