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Pharmacogenetic analysis of opioid dependence treatment dose and dropout rate

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posted on 2018-01-15, 12:56 authored by Richard C. Crist, James Li, Glenn A. Doyle, Alex Gilbert, Bryan M. Dechairo, Wade H. Berrettini

Background: Currently, no pharmacogenetic tests for selecting an opioid-dependence pharmacotherapy have been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration. Objectives: Determine the effects of variants in 11 genes on dropout rate and dose in patients receiving methadone or buprenorphine/naloxone (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00315341). Methods: Variants in six pharmacokinetic genes (CYP1A2, CYP2B6, CYP2C19, CYP2C9, CYP2D6, CYP3A4) and five pharmacodynamic genes (HTR2A, OPRM1, ADRA2A, COMT, SLC6A4) were genotyped in samples from a 24-week, randomized, open-label trial of methadone and buprenorphine/naloxone for the treatment of opioid dependence (n = 764; 68.7% male). Genotypes were then used to determine the metabolism phenotype for each pharmacokinetic gene. Phenotypes or genotypes for each gene were analyzed for association with dropout rate and mean dose. Results: Genotype for 5-HTTLPR in the SLC6A4 gene was nominally associated with dropout rate when the methadone and buprenorphine/naloxone groups were combined. When the most significant variants associated with dropout rate were analyzed using pairwise analyses, SLC6A4 (5-HTTLPR) and COMT (Val158Met; rs4860) had nominally significant associations with dropout rate in methadone patients. None of the genes analyzed in the study was associated with mean dose of methadone or buprenorphine/naloxone. Conclusions: This study suggests that functional polymorphisms related to synaptic dopamine or serotonin levels may predict dropout rates during methadone treatment. Patients with the S/S genotype at 5-HTTLPR in SLC6A4 or the Val/Val genotype at Val158Met in COMT may require additional treatment to improve their chances of completing addiction treatment. Replication in other methadone patient populations will be necessary to ensure the validity of these findings.

Funding

Main START study funding came from the National Institute on Drug Abuse through the Clinical Trials Network (CTN) through a series of grants provided to each participating node: the Pacific Northwest Node (U10 DA01714), the Oregon Hawaii Node (U10 DA013036), the California/Arizona Node (U10 DA015815), the New England Node (U10 DA13038), the Delaware Valley Node (U10 DA13043), the Pacific Region Node (U10 DA13045), and the New York Node (U10 DA013046). RCC was supported by NIDA grant K01 DA036751. WHB was supported by the Delaware Valley Node (U10 DA13043) and by R21 DA036808.

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