Background: Pharmacogenetic guided prescribing can be used to improve the safety and effectiveness of medicines. There are several approaches by which this intervention might be implemented in clinical practice, which will vary depending on the health system and clinical context.
Aim: To understand the clinical utility of panel-based pharmacogenetic testing in patients admitted acutely to hospital and to establish variables which predict if an individual might benefit from the intervention.
Design: A cross-sectional study recruiting patients admitted acutely to hospital.
Methods: Participants underwent panel-based pharmacogenetic testing and their genetic results were analysed in their context of the medicines they had been exposed to as an inpatient. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients with clinically actionable gene-drug interactions. Individual variables which predict the clinical utility of pharmacogenetic testing were established via logistic regression.
Results: Genetic and prescribing data were available for 482 in-patients (55% male; median age 61.2 years; range: 18 to 96), 97.9% of whom carried a pharmacogenetic result of interest. During their admission, 79.5% of patients were exposed to a medicine for which there is pharmacogenetic prescribing guidance available. Just under 1 in 7 individuals (13.7%) had a clinically actionable gene-drug interaction. Increasing age (> 50-years) was positively correlated with the likelihood (2.7-fold increased risk) of having a clinically actionable interaction.
Conclusions: These findings demonstrate the potential scale, and potential clinical utility, of pharmacogenetic testing as an intervention, highlighting the need to develop infrastructure to support healthcare professionals make use of this emerging tool.
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Association of Physicians.