PLoS Genetics (Feb 2021)

Actionable pharmacogenetic variants in Hong Kong Chinese exome sequencing data and projected prescription impact in the Hong Kong population.

  • Mullin Ho Chung Yu,
  • Marcus Chun Yin Chan,
  • Claudia Ching Yan Chung,
  • Andrew Wang Tat Li,
  • Chara Yin Wa Yip,
  • Christopher Chun Yu Mak,
  • Jeffrey Fong Ting Chau,
  • Mianne Lee,
  • Jasmine Lee Fong Fung,
  • Mandy Ho Yin Tsang,
  • Joshua Chun Ki Chan,
  • Wilfred Hing Sang Wong,
  • Jing Yang,
  • William Chun Ming Chui,
  • Patrick Ho Yu Chung,
  • Wanling Yang,
  • So Lun Lee,
  • Godfrey Chi Fung Chan,
  • Paul Kwong Hang Tam,
  • Yu Lung Lau,
  • Clara Sze Man Tang,
  • Kit San Yeung,
  • Brian Hon Yin Chung

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1009323
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 2
p. e1009323

Abstract

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Preemptive pharmacogenetic testing has the potential to improve drug dosing by providing point-of-care patient genotype information. Nonetheless, its implementation in the Chinese population is limited by the lack of population-wide data. In this study, secondary analysis of exome sequencing data was conducted to study pharmacogenomics in 1116 Hong Kong Chinese. We aimed to identify the spectrum of actionable pharmacogenetic variants and rare, predicted deleterious variants that are potentially actionable in Hong Kong Chinese, and to estimate the proportion of dispensed drugs that may potentially benefit from genotype-guided prescription. The projected preemptive pharmacogenetic testing prescription impact was evaluated based on the patient prescription data of the public healthcare system in 2019, serving 7.5 million people. Twenty-nine actionable pharmacogenetic variants/ alleles were identified in our cohort. Nearly all (99.6%) subjects carried at least one actionable pharmacogenetic variant, whereas 93.5% of subjects harbored at least one rare deleterious pharmacogenetic variant. Based on the prescription data in 2019, 13.4% of the Hong Kong population was prescribed with drugs with pharmacogenetic clinical practice guideline recommendations. The total expenditure on actionable drugs was 33,520,000 USD, and it was estimated that 8,219,000 USD (24.5%) worth of drugs were prescribed to patients with an implicated actionable phenotype. Secondary use of exome sequencing data for pharmacogenetic analysis is feasible, and preemptive pharmacogenetic testing has the potential to support prescription decisions in the Hong Kong Chinese population.