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Published in: Journal of Thrombosis and Thrombolysis 4/2024

13-03-2024 | Clopidogrel

Development of a routine bedside CYP2C19 genotype assessment program for antiplatelet therapy guidance in a community hospital catheterization laboratory

Authors: Paul A. Gurbel, Kevin Bliden, Matthew Sherwood, Hamid Taheri, Behnam Tehrani, Marjaneh Akbari, Shahram Yazdani, Juzer Ali Asgar, Rahul Chaudhary, Udaya S. Tantry

Published in: Journal of Thrombosis and Thrombolysis | Issue 4/2024

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Abstract

Genotype based personalized antiplatelet therapy in the setting of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) has been studied in clinical trials. Despite the demonstrated risk associated with CYP2C19 loss-of-function (LoF) carriage in clopidogrel-treated PCI patients, real-world implementation of genotyping for PCI has been low. The goal of the current study was to provide CYP2C19 genotype information to the interventionalist prior to the completion of the catheterization to facilitate immediate personalized antiplatelet therapy. Routine personalization of P2Y12 inhibitor therapy for PCI in a community hospital cardiac catheterization laboratory by POC genotyping with the SpartanRx system was first offered in February 2017. A best practice advisory (BPA) based on the Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium Guideline for CYP2C19 genotype and clopidogrel therapy was placed in the electronic health record prescription medication ordering system. By December 2019, 1,052 patients had CYP2C19 genotype testing, 429 patients underwent PCI with genotype guided antiplatelet therapy, and 250 patients underwent PCI without genotype testing and received antiplatelet therapy at the discretion of the treating physician. BPA compliance was 93. 87% of LoF allele carriers were prescribed ticagrelor or prasugrel whereas 96% of non-LoF allele carriers were prescribed clopidogrel. The genotyping results were available within 1 h and made immediately available for decision making by the interventional cardiologist. POC CYP2C19 genotyping is feasible in a community hospital catheterization laboratory and is associated with high rate of best practice compliance.
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Metadata
Title
Development of a routine bedside CYP2C19 genotype assessment program for antiplatelet therapy guidance in a community hospital catheterization laboratory
Authors
Paul A. Gurbel
Kevin Bliden
Matthew Sherwood
Hamid Taheri
Behnam Tehrani
Marjaneh Akbari
Shahram Yazdani
Juzer Ali Asgar
Rahul Chaudhary
Udaya S. Tantry
Publication date
13-03-2024
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Thrombosis and Thrombolysis / Issue 4/2024
Print ISSN: 0929-5305
Electronic ISSN: 1573-742X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11239-024-02953-8

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