Articles

Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics (2008) 83, 3, 460–470.doi: 10.1038/sj.clpt.6100316

CYP2C9 Genotype-guided Warfarin Prescribing Enhances the Efficacy and Safety of Anticoagulation: A Prospective Randomized Controlled Study

Y Caraco1, S Blotnick1 and M Muszkat1

1Clinical Pharmacology Unit, Division of Medicine, Hadassah University Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel

Correspondence: Y Caraco, caraco@hadassah.org.il

Received 21 April 2007; Accepted 18 June 2007; Published online 12 September 2007.

Top

Abstract

Warfarin anticoagulation effect is characterized by marked variability, some of which has been attributed to CYP2C9 polymorphisms. This study prospectively examines whether a priori knowledge of CYP2C9 genotype may improve warfarin therapy. Patients were randomly assigned to receive warfarin by a validated algorithm ("control", 96 patients) or CYP2C9 genotype-adjusted algorithms ("study", 95 patients). The first therapeutic international normalized ratio and stable anticoagulation were reached 2.73 and 18.1 days earlier in the study group, respectively (P<0.001). The faster rate of initial anticoagulation was driven by a 28% higher daily dose in the study group (P<0.001). Study group patients spent more time within the therapeutic range (80.4 vs 63.4%, respectively, P<0.001) and experienced less minor bleeding (3.2 vs 12.5%, P<0.02, respectively). In conclusion, CYP2C9 genotype-guided warfarin therapy is more efficient and safer than the "average-dose" protocol. Future research should focus on construction of algorithms that incorporate other polymorphisms (VKORC1), host factors, and environmental influences.

MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS

These links to content published by NPG are automatically generated.

Extra navigation

.

naturejobs

natureproducts


ADVERTISEMENT