Heterogeneity in the underlying mechanisms of disease processes and inter-patient variability in drug responses are major challenges in drug development. To address these challenges, biomarker ...strategies based on a range of platforms, such as microarray gene-expression technologies, are increasingly being applied to elucidate these sources of variability and thereby potentially increase drug development success rates. With the aim of enhancing understanding of the regulatory significance of such biomarker data by regulators and sponsors, the US Food and Drug Administration initiated a programme in 2004 to allow sponsors to submit exploratory genomic data voluntarily, without immediate regulatory impact. In this article, a selection of case studies from the first 5 years of this programme - which is now known as the voluntary exploratory data submission programme, and also involves collaboration with the European Medicines Agency - are discussed, and general lessons are highlighted.
Molecular testing is becoming an important part of the diagnosis of any patient with cancer. The challenge to laboratories is to meet this need, using reliable methods and processes to ensure that ...patients receive a timely and accurate report on which their treatment will be based. The aim of this paper is to provide minimum requirements for the management of molecular pathology laboratories. This general guidance should be augmented by the specific guidance available for different tumour types and tests. Preanalytical considerations are important, and careful consideration of the way in which specimens are obtained and reach the laboratory is necessary. Sample receipt and handling follow standard operating procedures, but some alterations may be necessary if molecular testing is to be performed, for instance to control tissue fixation. DNA and RNA extraction can be standardised and should be checked for quality and quantity of output on a regular basis. The choice of analytical method(s) depends on clinical requirements, desired turnaround time, and expertise available. Internal quality control, regular internal audit of the whole testing process, laboratory accreditation, and continual participation in external quality assessment schemes are prerequisites for delivery of a reliable service. A molecular pathology report should accurately convey the information the clinician needs to treat the patient with sufficient information to allow for correct interpretation of the result. Molecular pathology is developing rapidly, and further detailed evidence-based recommendations are required for many of the topics covered here.
The cost of large-scale association studies may be reduced substantially by analysis of pooled DNA from multiple individuals. Here we examine the optimal symmetric and asymmetric designs for pooling ...experiments for quantitative traits under a range of assumptions about the underlying genetic model and the sources of experimental errors in allele frequency estimation. The results indicate that, in the absence of experimental errors and for common alleles with additive effects, a symmetric pooling scheme comparing the top 27% with the bottom 27% of the trait distribution is optimal, extracting 80% the total information available. A symmetric design is not optimal for rare or recessive alleles, which require asymmetric (or other) pooling strategies. Allele frequency measurement errors reduce the optimal pooling fraction as well as the overall efficiency of the pooling design. In contrast, random variation in the amount of DNA contributed by individuals to a pool reduces only the overall efficiency of the pooling design. Our results emphasize the importance of minimising experimental errors and suggest a pooling fraction of around 20%.
Summary
The analysis of genome wide variation offers the possibility of unravelling the genes involved in the pathogenesis of disease. Genome wide association studies are also particularly useful for ...identifying and validating targets for therapeutic intervention as well as for detecting markers for drug efficacy and side effects. The cost of such large‐scale genetic association studies may be reduced substantially by the analysis of pooled DNA from multiple individuals. However, experimental errors inherent in pooling studies lead to a potential increase in the false positive rate and a loss in power compared to individual genotyping. Here we quantify various sources of experimental error using empirical data from typical pooling experiments and corresponding individual genotyping counts using two statistical methods. We provide analytical formulas for calculating these different errors in the absence of complete information, such as replicate pool formation, and for adjusting for the errors in the statistical analysis. We demonstrate that DNA pooling has the potential of estimating allele frequencies accurately, and adjusting the pooled allele frequency estimates for differential allelic amplification considerably improves accuracy. Estimates of the components of error show that differential allelic amplification is the most important contributor to the error variance in absolute allele frequency estimation, followed by allele frequency measurement and pool formation errors. Our results emphasise the importance of minimising experimental errors and obtaining correct error estimates in genetic association studies.
Tacrine, the first acetylcholinesterase inhibitor used in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease, is associated with transaminase elevation in up to 50% of patients. The mechanism of tacrine-induced ...liver damage is not fully understood, but earlier studies have suggested that genetic factors may play a role. Our aim was to investigate whether single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 19 candidate genes were associated with tacrine-induced liver damage.
Sixty-nine patients of Caucasian origin treated with tacrine for Alzheimer's disease were investigated by genotyping 241 SNPs in 19 candidate genes potentially related to hepatotoxicity. The association with ABCB4 which encodes MultiDrug Resistance Protein 3 (MDR3) was explored in transepithelial transport studies using the ABCB4-transfected pig kidney epithelial cell line (LLC-PK1).
The strongest association between alanine aminotransferase levels and three SNPs within ATP-binding cassette, subfamily B (MDR/TAP), member 4 (ABCB4) (uncorrected P=0.0005) was not significant after adjusting for multiple testing. No association was demonstrated with ATP-binding cassette, subfamily B (MDR/TAP), member 1 (ABCB1) or carnitine O-octanoyltransferase (CROT) which are located adjacent to ABCB4. Using the transepithelial transport system we failed to show a difference in tacrine accumulation between ABCB4-transfected and parental cell lines. The association with ABCB4 warrants further testing using either another population and/or functional studies.
The use of carbamazepine (CBZ), the most commonly prescribed antiepileptic drug, is hampered by the occurrence of severe, potentially lethal hypersensitivity reactions. The pathogenesis of ...hypersensitivity is not yet known, but immune mechanisms are involved. Predisposition to CBZ hypersensitivity is likely to be genetically determined, and genes within the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) have been implicated. The heat shock protein (HSP70) gene cluster is located in the MHC class III region.
Using a case-control study design, we compared 61 patients with CBZ hypersensitivity (22 with a severe reaction) to 44 patients on CBZ with no signs of hypersensitivity and 172 healthy controls. The genotyping strategy involved identification of common and rare single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within the HSP70 gene cluster by sequencing, estimation of linkage disequilibrium (LD) and haplotype structure, and thereafter, analysis of SNP/haplotype frequencies in the cases and controls. Population substructure was evaluated by genotyping of 34 microsatellites.
Twenty-five SNPs were detected across the three HSP70 genes. Analyses revealed that alleles G, T and C at the SNPs HSPA1A +1911 C/G, HSPA1A +438 C/T and HSPA1L +2437 T/C, respectively, were associated with protection from serious hypersensitivity reactions to CBZ, with the associated alleles falling on a common haplotype. We were unable to detect the presence of population stratification in our patients and controls.
Our data show that HSP70 gene variants are associated with serious CBZ hypersensitivity reactions, but whether this is causal or reflects LD with another gene within the MHC requires further study.
To investigate potential relationships between SNPs and acute interstitial lung disease (ILD) events in Japanese non-small-cell lung cancer patients receiving gefitinib.
Japanese non-small-cell lung ...cancer patients treated with gefitinib from a prospective pharmacoepidemiological cohort with a nested case-control study component ('CCS'; 52 ILD cases, 139 controls) and a retrospective study (28 ILD cases, 55 controls) were genotyped for nearly 500,000 SNPs. Associations between genotype and ILD were evaluated using Fisher's exact test and logistic regression modeling, and false discovery rate analysis was used to adjust for the large number of statistical tests.
The CCS data provided some false discovery rate evidence that the significance of top-ranking SNPs exceeded levels expected by chance, suggesting some genuine associations. However, replication analyses using retrospective study data were not supportive and there was little evidence of strong genetic associations from a combined analysis. Adjustment of CCS analyses for clinical variables provided little additional convincing evidence. Significant gene-gene interactions between SNP pairs using CCS data were not confirmed in retrospective study replication analyses.
Although it is not possible to exclude genetic influences in ILD etiology, common sequence variation is unlikely to explain a major component of ILD risk. Our top results may provide a useful hypothesis-generating starting point for further research.
Sulfamethoxazole in combination with trimethoprim (cotrimoxazole) is used for prophylaxis and treatment of several opportunistic infections in HIV-infected patients. It is associated with a high ...incidence of hypersensitivity reactions, which is thought to have an immune basis. Genetic polymorphisms in MHC are known to predispose to hypersensitivity reactions to a structurally diverse group of drugs in HIV-positive patients. The aim of the study was to determine whether functional polymorphisms in TNF, LTA, HSPA1L and HLA-DRB1 genes influence the risk of cotrimoxazole hypersensitivity in HIV-infected patients.
We genotyped 136 HIV-positive patients with (n = 53) and without (n = 83) cotrimoxazole hypersensitivity using a combination of PCR-based techniques, including PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphisms, PCR-sequence specific oligonucleotides and real-time PCR. Genotypes and the haplotype frequencies were analyzed using the chi(2) test in the Haploview and CLUMP programs.
No statistically significant difference in SNP or haplotype frequencies were found in HIV-infected sulfamethoxazole hypersensitive patients compared with controls.
Our data show that MHC polymorphisms are not major predisposing factors for cotrimoxazole hypersensitivity, although we cannot exclude a minor contribution. An environmental factor (i.e., HIV infection) seems to predominate over any of the genetic factors so far investigated in increasing the risk of cotrimoxazole hypersensitivity.