Feasibility and Acceptability of a Pharmacogenomic Decision Support System in Palliative Care

Pharmacogenomic analysis may improve the efficacy or safety of the drugs used in palliative care. Decision support systems may promote clinical integration of this information. To determine the feasibility and acceptability of a pharmacist-directed pharmacogenomic decision support system in the care...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of palliative medicine 2022-02, Vol.25 (2), p.219-226
Hauptverfasser: Bull, Janet H, Bice, Tyler, Satterwhite, Wesley J, Massie, Lisa, Burpee, Elizabeth, Knotkova, Helena, Portenoy, Russell K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pharmacogenomic analysis may improve the efficacy or safety of the drugs used in palliative care. Decision support systems may promote clinical integration of this information. To determine the feasibility and acceptability of a pharmacist-directed pharmacogenomic decision support system in the care of patients with advanced illness and explore the drug-gene and drug-drug interactions that occur in this population. Physicians or nurse practitioners from two U.S. hospice agencies identified opioid-treated patients receiving multiple other drugs. Buccal samples and clinical data were obtained from consenting patients. A pharmacist used the proprietary MedWise™ platform to evaluate the current medications in terms of genotype and phenotype, created a standardized report describing potential interactions and recommended actions that may reduce the associated risk. Clinicians could access the report online and completed Likert-type scales to assess use and satisfaction with the system. Twenty clinicians and 100 patients participated. The reports revealed that 74 drugs were subject to 462 drug-gene interactions and 77 were involved in 691 drug-drug interactions; only 4 and 16 patients, respectively, had no drug-gene or drug-drug interactions. Clinicians routinely checked the reports and used the information to change ≥1 treatments in 55 (55%) patients. Almost all clinicians rated the system likely to improve the quality of care and all "agreed" or "strongly agreed" to recommend the system to colleagues. This pharmacist-directed pharmacogenomic decision support system was perceived positively and was integrated into practice. Further studies are warranted to its clinical integration and its outcomes.
ISSN:1096-6218
1557-7740
DOI:10.1089/jpm.2021.0270