The increase in identification of putative biomarkers and opportunities to develop tailored treatments are due to emergence of omics technologies. Application of pharmacogenetic knowledge with the help of quick and cheap companion diagnostics in the primary care setting is expected to deliver improved treatment and reduced heathcare costs. Warfarin and aspirin are the two most widely prescribed drugs for preventing cardiovascular diseases. Long term aspirin use has also been shown to reduce risk, recurrence and mortality from colorectal cancer. However, they both have narrow therapeutic windows and several genetic polymorphisms have been noted to influence their dose and efficacy. We therefore have launched two collaborative projects: first, to study the genetics of warfarin safety in the Gujarati Indian population and second, to identify further polymorphisms that modulates aspirin’s colorectal cancer chemopreventive efficacy. Understanding the impact of polymorphisms on dose and efficacy for these drugs would lead to development of a combined panel of markers that would predict accurate therapeutic dose with minimal risk for adverse reactions. These markers will be deployed at the point of care settings using a novel handheld genotyping device which will use disposable microfluidic cassettes and silicon nanowires currently developed by QuantuMDx. Results, future work, opportunities and barriers will be examined.
Point of care testing for improving risk- benefit ratio of aspirin and warfarin
Harsh Sheth
Emma Northwood
Faye Elliott
Michael Jackson
Mauro Santibanez Koref
John Tyson
Ann Daly
Jonathan O’Halloran
Jayesh Sheth
Frenny Sheth
D Timothy Bishop
John Burn
Corresponding author.
Supplement
Proceedings of the International Conference on Human Genetics and 39th Annual Meeting of Indian Society of Human Genetics
The conference and publication charges for this supplement were funded through the co-sponsorship of the Gujarat State Biotechnology Mission (GSBTM) and Department of Science and Technology (DST), Government of Gujarat, Genzyme and Zydus Cadila. Genzyme and Zydus Cadila were not involved in the selection of abstracts.
Conference
23-25 January 2014
International Conference on Human Genetics and 39th Annual Meeting of the Indian Society of Human Genetics (ISHG)
Ahmedabad, India
Collection date 2014.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.