Lecture 1 - personalised medicine Flashcards

1
Q

What does personalised medicine aim to achieve

A
Reduced trial and error prescribing 
Avoid adverse reactions
Increase patient compliance
Reveal additional uses
Control the cost of healthcare.
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2
Q

What are the 7 main causes for variability in drug responses

A
Age
Ethnicity
Genetics/genomics
Immunological factors
Concomitant disease
Pregnancy 
Drug interactions
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3
Q

How does age interfere with drug action

A

In new borns the organs are not well developed. E.g the GFR in newborns is around 20% of adults, therefore the half life of a drug is much longer.

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4
Q

What drug has a half life of 40 hours in adults, 200 hours in newborns and 80 hours in the elderly

A

Digoxin

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5
Q

How do SNPs effect drug action

A

SNPs can effect the way that a drug is metabolised.

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6
Q

What is inherited thrombophilia

A

An SNP in factor V, part of the clotting cascade. People with the mutation are prone to deep vein thrombosis and increased tendency to form clots.

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7
Q

Concomitant diseases effecting which organ will have an effect on drug action

A

Kidney and liver as they are the main sites for metabolising drugs.

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8
Q

What is the result of drugs that cause gastric stasis

A

Slow the metabolism of a given drug.

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9
Q

What is a disease that renders statins ineffective

A

Familial hypercholesterolemia. Lack of function of LDLR receptors.

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10
Q

What do diuretics do and what does this predispose a patient to

A

Lower plasma potassium and predisposes a patient to digoxin toxicity

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11
Q

What is the action of Siladenafil

A

Used in pulmonary artery hypertension, its a vasodilator that potentiates organic nitrates. In combination with other drugs it can cause severe hypotension.

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12
Q

How does warfarin metabolism differ between individuals

A

The CIP2C9 gene encodes the enzyme which metabolises warfarin. SNPs of the gene *2 and *3 metabolise the drug slower than WT so the conc of the drug has to be increased.

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13
Q

What is VKORC

A

An apoxide enzyme which encodes the drug target of warfarin which also has a number of polymorphisms

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14
Q

What polymorphisms are present for VKORC and what does this mean

A

GG, GA and AA. People with the AA variant are more sensitive to warfarin and require a lower dose. Both this and the CYP2C9 gene info is required to decide the dosage for a patient on warfarin.

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