Issue: January 2014
November 19, 2013
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Role of genetics in warfarin dosing a source of debate

Issue: January 2014
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DALLAS — Two trials presented at AHA 2013, EU-PACT and COAG, yielded conflicting data on the utility of genetics in achievement of optimal warfarin dosing.

Perspective from Patrick T. Ellinor, MD, PhD

Clinicians often have difficulty determining the optimal dose of warfarin for a particular patient. Research shows that CYP2C9 and VKORC1 account for a large proportion of inter-individual variability seen with dose requirements, but there is currently little understanding of how to incorporate these data into clinical practice, which served as the motivation for the EU-PACT and COAG trials, two presenters said at AHA 2013.

EU-PACT

Munir Pirmohamed, MD, PhD, National Health Services chair of pharmaco-genetics at the University of Liverpool, U.K., and colleagues conducted the pragmatic, single blind, randomized EU-PACT trial to evaluate whether genotype-guided dosing was superior to standard clinical care over 3 months.

Munir Pirmohamed, PhD 

Munir Pirmohamed

The standard care arm included a warfarin loading dose for 3 days. International normalized ratio (INR) was checked on day 4 and the next dose was adjusted based on an algorithm used by standardized software. From day 6 onward, dose adjustment was based on INR. For the genotype-guided dosing arm, the researchers used a point-of-care assay to perform genetic testing. Patients received an individualized loading dose for 3 days; INR was checked on day 4 and dose adjustments were made based on clinical and genetic factors; and on day 6, patients received standard care.  

A total of 455 patients (mean age, 67.3 years; 61% men; 98.5% white) with atrial fibrillation (72.1%) or venous thromboembolism were randomly assigned to genotype-guided warfarin dosing (n=222) or standard clinical care (n=228). The primary endpoint was percent time in the therapeutic INR range of 2 to 3 during 3 months after initiation of warfarin therapy.

The primary analysis included 211 patients in the genotype-guided dosing arm and 216 in the standard care arm. For the primary outcome, percent time in the therapeutic INR range was 60.3% in the standard care arm vs. 67.4% in the genotype-guided dosing arm, with a statistically significant adjusted difference of 7% (P<.001).

The researchers observed no major bleeds; three clinically serious bleeds, all of which occurred in the standard care arm; and no difference in minor bleeds between study arms. Only one thromboembolic event occurred.

“Genotyping before initiation of warfarin increased the percent time in the therapeutic range by approximately 7%; reduced overanticoagulation by 69%; reduced time required to reach therapeutic INR by 28%; improved the time to reach required stable dose by 25%; and reduced the number of warfarin dose adjustments by 9%,” Pirmohamed said at a press conference.

COAG

Results from the COAG trial yielded different conclusions, Stephen Kimmel, MD, MSCE, professor of medicine at University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, said at the press conference.

For the randomized, double blind, multicenter COAG trial, researchers compared two approaches to warfarin dosing: initiation of therapy based on clinical information only vs. initiation of therapy based on clinical information and a patient’s individual genetic information using CYP2C9 and VKORC1. All patients were genotyped at the beginning of the trial.

Stephen E. Kimmel, MD, MSCE 

Stephen Kimmel

The intervention occurred over 5 days. In both arms, a dosing algorithm was used from the first 3 days and then a dose revision algorithm was used on days 4 and 5. The pharmacogenetic-guided arm used clinical and genetic data while the clinical-guided arm used only clinical data. Similar to EU-PACT, the primary endpoint was percent time in the therapeutic INR range, but at 1 month rather than 3 months.The researchers randomly assigned 1,015 patients (mean age, 57 years; 27% black) with stroke, venous thrombosis or AF to pharmaco-genetic dosing (n=514) or clinically-guided dosing (n=501). About two-thirds of all patients began as inpatients, with a little more than half having had deep vein thrombosis or VTE.

At 45% in each group, results revealed no difference in percent time in the therapeutic range at 4 weeks. However, data revealed a significant difference in effects of the algorithms by race, according to Kimmel. Black patients in the pharmacogenetic group fared worse than non-black patients and had better rates of the primary outcome with clinically-guided dosing vs. pharmaco-genetic dosing.

Adverse events did not differ between groups at 4 weeks.

“The COAG trial does not support the hypothesis that genetic information provides added benefit above and beyond clinical information on anticoagulation control over the first 4 weeks of warfarin therapy. In addition, there was no effect of pharmacogenetic-based dosing in those expected to have benefit based on predicted dose differences. … COAG highlights the importance of performing randomized trials for pharmacogenetics, particularly for complex medicine regimens such as warfarin,” Kimmel said. – by Melissa Foster

For more information:

Kimmel S. LBCT.05. New strategies for atrial fibrillation patients: Rhythm and thrombosis.

Pirmohamed M. LBCT.05. New strategies for atrial fibrillation patients: Rhythm and thrombosis.

Both presented at: the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions; Nov. 16-20, 2013; Dallas.

Disclosure: Kimmel reports financial ties to Johnson & Johnson and Pfizer. Pirmohamed reports receiving grants from the EU FP7 framework program. Additional funding for COAG was provided by AutoGenomics Inc, Bristol-Myers Squibb and GenMark Diagnostics.