Authors |
Rieder
MJ, Reiner AP, Gage BF, Nickerson DA, Eby CS, McLeod HL, Blough DK, Thummel
KE, Veenstra DL, Rettie AE. |
Abstract |
BACKGROUND:
The management of warfarin therapy is complicated by a wide variation
among patients in drug response. Variants in the gene encoding vitamin
K epoxide reductase complex 1 (VKORC1) may affect the response to warfarin.
METHODS: We conducted a retrospective study of European-American patients
receiving long-term warfarin maintenance therapy. Multiple linear-regression
analysis was used to determine the effect of VKORC1 haplotypes on the
warfarin dose. We determined VKORC1 haplotype frequencies in African-American,
European-American, and Asian-American populations and VKORC1 messenger
RNA (mRNA) expression in human liver samples.
RESULTS: We identified 10 common noncoding VKORC1 single-nucleotide polymorphisms
and inferred five major haplotypes. We identified a low-dose haplotype
group (A) and a high-dose haplotype group (B). The mean (+/-SE) maintenance
dose of warfarin differed significantly among the three haplotype group
combinations, at 2.7+/-0.2 mg per day for A/A, 4.9+/-0.2 mg per day for
A/B, and 6.2+/-0.3 mg per day for B/B (P<0.001). VKORC1 haplotype groups
A and B explained approximately 25 percent of the variance in dose. Asian
Americans had a higher proportion of group A haplotypes and African Americans
a higher proportion of group B haplotypes. VKORC1 mRNA levels varied according
to the haplotype combination.
CONCLUSIONS: VKORC1 haplotypes can be used to stratify patients into low-,
intermediate-, and high-dose warfarin groups and may explain differences
in dose requirements among patients of different ancestries. The molecular
mechanism of this warfarin dose response appears to be regulated at the
transcriptional level..
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