Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jun 2021)

Acenocoumarol Pharmacogenetic Dosing Algorithm versus Usual Care in Patients with Venous Thromboembolism: A Randomised Clinical Trial

  • Hoi Yan Tong,
  • Alberto M. Borobia,
  • Manuel Quintana-Díaz,
  • Sara Fabra,
  • Manuel González-Viñolis,
  • Carmen Fernández-Capitán,
  • María A. Rodriguez-Dávila,
  • Alicia Lorenzo,
  • Ana María López-Parra,
  • Nuria Ruiz-Giménez,
  • Francisco Abad-Santos,
  • Carmen Suarez,
  • Olga Madridano,
  • Jorge Francisco Gómez-Cerezo,
  • Pilar Llamas,
  • Carlos Baeza-Richer,
  • Eduardo Arroyo-Pardo,
  • Antonio J. Carcas,
  • The PGX-ACE Spanish Investigators Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10132949
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 13
p. 2949

Abstract

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Patients with venous thromboembolism (VTE) require immediate treatment with anticoagulants such as acenocoumarol. This multicentre randomised clinical trial evaluated the effectiveness of a dosing pharmacogenetic algorithm versus a standard-of-care dose adjustment at the beginning of acenocoumarol treatment. We included 144 patients with VTE. On the day of recruitment, a blood sample was obtained for genotyping (CYP2C9*2, CYP2C9*3, VKORC1, CYP4F2, APOE). Dose adjustment was performed on day 3 or 4 after the start of treatment according to the assigned group and the follow-up was at 12 weeks. The principal variable was the percentage of patients with an international normalised ratio (INR) within the therapeutic range on day 7. Thirty-four (47.2%) patients had an INR within the therapeutic range at day 7 after the start of treatment in the genotype-guided group compared with 14 (21.9%) in the control group (p = 0.0023). There were no significant differences in the time to achieve a stable INR, the number of INRs within the range in the first 6 weeks and at the end of study. Our results suggest the use of a pharmacogenetic algorithm for patients with VTE could be useful in achieving target INR control in the first days of treatment.

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