Genetic risk factors for clozapine-induced neutropenia and agranulocytosis in a Dutch psychiatric population
Author(s) -
Karen van der Weide,
Harriët M. Loovers,
Kirsten M. Pondman,
Jan Bogers,
Tahar van der Straaten,
Ellen Langemeijer,
Daniel Cohen,
Jan N. M. Commandeur,
Jan van der Weide
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
the pharmacogenomics journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.804
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1473-1150
pISSN - 1470-269X
DOI - 10.1038/tpj.2016.32
Subject(s) - clozapine , neutropenia , medicine , population , glutathione , pharmacology , gastroenterology , biology , psychiatry , toxicity , schizophrenia (object oriented programming) , enzyme , biochemistry , environmental health
Prescription of clozapine is complicated by the occurrence of clozapine-induced reduction of neutrophils. The aim of this study was to identify genetic risk factors in a population of 310 Dutch patients treated with clozapine, including 38 patients developing neutropenia and 31 patients developing agranulocytosis. NQO2 1541AA (NRH quinone oxidoreductase 2; protects cells against oxidative metabolites) was present at a higher frequency in agranulocytosis patients compared with control (23% versus 7%, P=0.03), as was ABCB1 (ABC-transporter-B1; drug efflux transporter) 3435TT (32% versus 20%, P=0.05). In patients developing neutropenia, ABCB1 3435TT and homozygosity for GSTT1 null (glutathione-S-transferase; conjugates reactive clozapine metabolites into glutathione) were more frequent compared with control (34% versus 20%, P=0.05 and 31% versus 14%, P=0.03), whereas GSTM1 null was less frequent in these patients (31% versus 52%, P=0.03). To investigate whether combinations of the identified genetic risk factors have a higher predictive value, should be confirmed in a larger case-control study.
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