Getting Pharmacists Into : What’s Been Going on and What to Expect

James Lee, PharmD, BCACP Clinical Assistant Professor Co-Director, UI Health Personalized Medicine Program University of Illinois at Chicago College of Pharmacy University of Illinois Hospital & Clinics Objectives

1. Describe the background and rationale for precision medicine. 2. Identify opportunities and challenges to pharmacogenetic (PGx) testing expansion and the clinical resources available to pharmacists. 3. Describe implications and issues surrounding direct-to-consumer (DTC) . 4. Describe the pharmacist’s role in pharmacogenetic testing and patient education. Disclosures

I have nothing relevant to disclose.

Any branded products, services, and images shown in this presentation are for illustrative and demonstrative purposes only. I do not endorse and am not promoting any of these entities, products, or services. Today’s Standard Approach

One Drug/Dose Fits All

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Good Effect No Effect Adverse Outcome A Tailored Approach

NORMAL POOR metabolizers Dose A Dose B Dose C or metabolizers Alternate INTERMEDIATE Agent metabolizers

Good Effect Good Effect Good Effect What’s in a Name?

Personalized Precision Precision Medicine Medicine Health An Approach to Treating, Managing & Preventing Disease 🏃🏃 Lifestyle

PRECISION HEALTH 🌴🌴 💊💊 Environment Genome Pharmacogenomics Pharmacogenomics: Why It’s Important

Reality of medications • Drugs can be dangerous • Drugs cost money and are expensive (non-adherence, wastage, new therapies)

Established scientific basis of PGx • Known impact of genetic influence on drug pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics

New and quality real-world evidence show clinical utility with commonly used medications

Many resources available to help clinicians apply PGx in clinical practice

8 PGx Testing Trends

Next generation sequencing • Whole exome sequencing • Whole genome sequencing

Variant-specific testing • Testing specific SNP(s) of interest • Currently more common than NGS

9 Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs)

• Most common type of • >1% frequency in the population • Single nucleotide substitution • May impact pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic response Timing of Testing

Patient failed all Patient starting Patient undergoing therapies and Healthy antidepressant therapy PCI started on PGx testing patient on no & multigene PGx panel clodidogrel and performed to medications is available tested for CYP2C19 identify cause

Preemptive Reactive How Should We Use PGx?

An additional tool to help solve medication challenges

REDUCE IMPROVE Achieve • Medicine waste medication treatment • Medicine cost selection/ outcomes • ADR exposure dosing FASTER • Readmissions • Etc

12 What is PGx Not?

13 Opportunities & Challenges to expanding PGx testing Promoting patient safety as a strategy

• Focus on preventing patient harm • Inject up-to-date clinical evidence into the conversation • Build allies and get different groups of people involved

15 Challenges

An “emerging” science • Low quality and limited literature in narrow populations (European, Asian) • Impact on clinical outcomes are still emerging, some mixed.

Inconsistent, unclear, and patchwork regulation • Evolving regulatory changes, pressure, reach • Questions re: test development, regulation • Multiple agencies involved w/ contradictory stances Challenges

WHEN is it appropriate to test • Conservative nature of clinical practice guidelines  lack of PGx recommendations

HOW to test • Appropriate test for a specific patient vs. a population • Single vs. multi- testing • Pre-emptive vs reactive • Result turnaround time • Getting interpretable results and recommendations to providers (and patients?)

Testing cost • Viewpoint: Short-term cost vs long-term investment • Evolving reimbursement Ethical & Legal Concerns

Information access, discrimination, patients’ use of own genetic info • Disease predisposition • Philosophical issues: origins, meaning, and behaviors in life • Reproductive rights • Gene therapy and germline engineering • Patenting: genetic sequences and human-made organisms

Patient privacy, autonomy, confidentiality

18 GINA 2008: Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act Prohibits requiring genetic information to determine: • Employment decisions • Health insurance coverage, rates or pre-existing conditions

“Genetic information”: • Individual genetic test results • Family member’s genetic test results up to 4th degree relatives • Fetus, embryo, or pregnant family member’s genetic test results • Family history of disease/disorder • Requests for genetic testing services

Government Publishing Office. https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/PLAW-110publ233/pdf/PLAW-110publ233.pdf. Accessed 7/31/19. 19 GINA 2008: Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act What GINA does NOT do: • Extend to other types of insurance • Life insurance • Disability insurance • Long-term care insurance • Mandate genetic testing • Apply to employers with < 15 employees • Prevent use of disease manifestation of disease/disorder to determine premium rates or eligibility • Prohibit health insurance from using test results for payment determination

Government Publishing Office. https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/PLAW-110publ233/pdf/PLAW-110publ233.pdf. Accessed 7/31/19. 20 Human Concerns

• Health literacy and assumptions • Influence of misleading, deceptive marketing Patients • Privacy and future use of genetic data • Genetic discrimination • Impact on family • Attitudes: “Should we test” vs “Standard of Care” • Limited knowledge, training, experience Providers • Guiding patient expectations and messaging • Managing patient anxiety  unnecessary follow-up and costs • (?) Research ethics

21 Opportunities

Patients are interested & generally positive towards genetic testing • Minimize trial/error • Selecting medications • Guiding dosing • Avoiding ADRs • Predict side effects, explain past reactions • Curiosity / novelty

Haga et al. Pharmacogenomics J. 2012;12(3):197-204. Lemke et al. Pharmacogenomics. 2018;19(4):321-331. 22 Opportunities

Ever expanding # medications where PGx is thought to matter • >300 gene-drug pairs identified • ~200 drugs with FDA labeling • ~130 “recommended” or “actionable” PGx variants

Higher quality evidence rapidly emerging • Multi-site, prospective, randomized, or pragmatic trials • Larger sample size • More diverse range of ancestries

Improving reimbursement landscape • Ex: CYP2C19, DPYD, TPMT, HLA-B, CYP2D6, VKORC1 NHGRI. The Cost of Sequencing a Human Genome. Available at www.genome.gov/sequencingcosts Opportunities

Improved ease of specimen collection (e.g. buccal swabs)

Improve drug selection, management, outcomes • Ex: clopidogrel, warfarin, antineoplastic agents

Focus on cost containment • Drug waste • Preventable admissions and readmissions • Mortality Opportunities Managing Gene-Herbal-Drug Interactions? Metabolized by 1A 2B6 2C19 2C9 2D6 3A4 3A5 CYP450? Black Cohosh INH INH Garlic 2E1 IND IND Ginger Yes, unspecified INH INH INH Gingko 2D6 INH INH INH IND Ginseng 3A4 INH INH INH INH Goldenseal INH INH INH Green Tea IND INH INH INH Licorice IND INH IND Milk Thistle INH INH INH St John’s Wort Yes, unspecified IND IND IND

Wieruszewk et al. Consult Pharm 2017;32(2):99-104. PMID 28569661 Predicted Phenotypes

Drug Metabolism • Poor – Intermediate – Normal – Rapid – Ultra-Rapid… METABOLIZER

Drug Transporter Function • Poor – Decreased – Normal – Increased… FUNCTION

Human Leukocyte Antigen Carrier Status • Carrier or Positive • Non-carrier or Negative Common PGx Tests

Drug Metabolism & Transporter Function • CYP2D6: TCA/SSRI (dosing/selection), codeine (toxicity: conversion to morphine) • CYP2C9: warfarin (w/ VKORC1: dosing), phenytoin (w/ HLA-B*15-02) • CYP2C19: TCA/SSRI (dosing/selection), clopidogrel (bioactivation), voriconazole (dosing) • DPYD: fluoropyrimidines (toxicity) • TPMT: thiopurines (toxicity) • SLCO1B1: (myopathy)

Human Leukocyte Antigen Carrier Status  hypersensitivity • HLA-B*57:01: abacavir • HLA-B*58:01: allopurinol • HLA-B*15:02 / HLA-A*31:01: carbamazepine, oxcarbazepine • HLA-B*15:02: phenytoin Genotype Nomenclature

Star-Allele Nomenclature HGVS/IUPAC Nomenclature • First system developed • (ex: 1075A>C) • *1 = reference/“normal” • A, G, C, T nucleotides function/wildtype; • Not necessarily the most common in an ancestral group Reference SNP Cluster ID (rs#) • (ex: rs1057910) • (Ex: Gene *Number/*Number) • Accession number to refer to a • CYP2C9 *1/*1  normal activity specific SNP • CYP2C9 *1/*2  intermediate • National Center for Biotechnology activity dbSNP database • CYP2C9 *2/*2  low activity Sample Test Result

Gene Genotype Predicted Phenotype CYP2C19 *2/*2 Poor metabolizer CYP2C9 *1/*1 Normal metabolizer CYP2D6 *1/*3 Intermediate metabolizer HLA-B*57:01 Positive High risk of hypersensitivity VKORC1 G/A Intermediate warfarin sensitivity SLCO1B1 T/T Normal function Interpreting a Genotype

Be careful!

The allele number is specific to the functional effect of a protein a specific gene encodes

CYP2D6 *1/*2  Extensive Metabolizer CYP2C19 *1/*2  Intermediate Metabolizer PGx Clinical Resources PharmGKB www.pharmgkb.org

• Annotates genetic variants, gene-drug-disease relationships, drug pathways • Searchable by: drug, gene, variant • Very Important Pharmacogene (VIP) Summaries

• References drug labels containing PGx information • Sources: US FDA, Health Canada, EU European Medicines Agency, Japan

• PGx clinical guidelines • https://www.pharmgkb.org/guidelines • Multiple organizations: CPIC, DPWG, CPNDS

33 PharmGKB PGx Level

PGx Level Definition/Drug Label Content Testing required • States or implies some type of testing should be conducted before using the drug • Indicates a variant is an indication for the drug • Includes the wording “should be performed” Testing recommended • States or implies some type of testing is recommended before using the drug • Includes the wording "should be considered" Actionable PGx • Does not discuss testing but contains information about changes in efficacy, dosage, or toxicity as a result of variants • May mention contraindication of the drug in a subset of patients but does not require or recommend gene, protein, or chromosomal testing Informative PGx • Mentions a gene or protein involved in drug metabolism or PD, but no information to suggest that variation in the gene/protein leads to different response

PharmGKB (drug label) 2018. 34 CPIC www.cpicpgx.org

• Develops peer-reviewed, expert consensus guidelines • Evidence sources: preclinical functional and clinical data; disease-specific consensus guidelines • Accelerate PGx implementation • Assist clinicians with HOW to translate and apply PGx test results • Address implementation process and barriers • 35 guidelines available • Continuously updated and expanded

35 CPIC Guidelines: Standardized Formats

In the guideline manuscript • Table 1: Genotype to phenotype translation • Table 2: Prescribing recommendations & recommendation strength

Supplemental materials (for each guideline) • Allele definition table • Allele functionality table • Gene frequency table • Diplotype-phenotype assignment table • Informatics tables

36 37 Table 1: Genotype to Phenotype Assignment

Note: Old nomenclature New nomenclature EXTENSIVE Metabolizer  NORMAL metabolizer

38 Table 2: Prescribing Recommendations

39 CPIC Guidelines Includes many commonly used drugs!

• Carbamazepine (HLA-B*15:02) • Codeine (CYP2D6) • Phenytoin (CYP2C9, HLA-B*1502) • Simvastatin (SLCO1B1) • Allopurinol (HLA-B*58:01) • Ondansetron (CYP2D6) • Abacavir (HLA-B*57:01) • Atazanavir (UGT1A1) • Warfarin (CYP2C9, VKORC1) • Thiopurines (TPMT) • TCAs (CYP2D6, 2C19) • Fluoropyramidines (DPYD) • SSRIs (CYP2D6, 2C19) • Tacrolimus (CYP3A5) • Clopidogrel (CYP2C19) • Voriconazole (CYP2C19)

40 Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing

• $100-200 • Advertised on TV, internet, etc. • Panel test • Ancestry • Traits • Carrier status • Drug metabolism • Metabolic assessments A simple process 1. Order kit online 2. Collect specimen(buccal swab or spit) 3. Mail kit back to testing company 4. Results available in 6-8 weeks • Online portal • Mail • Phone What can you get tested?

Ancestry/admixture • Ancestry composition • Maternal and paternal haplogroups • DNA family/ancestry inherited from parents • Neanderthal ancestry What can you get tested?

Traits / Likelihood • Back hair • Skin pigmentation • Balding • Widow’s peak • Bitter taste reception • Asparagus odor detection • Cheek dimples • Toe length ratio • Freckles • Earwax type • Hair curliness • Many more… What can you get tested?

Nutritional (nutrigenetic) & metabolic assessment (wellness) • Genetic weight • Deep sleep • Lactose intolerance • Muscle composition • Saturated fat and weight • Sleep movement • Caffeine consumption • Many more… What can you get tested?

Carrier Status / Disease Susceptibility • Age-related macular generation, Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency, hereditary thrombophilia, late-onset Alzheimer’s Disease, Parkinson’s Disease • Cystic Fibrosis, Bloom Syndrome, Beta Thalassemia, Autosomal Recessive Polycystic Kidney Disease, Congenital Disorder of Glycosylation Type 1a, Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis, Sickle Cell Anemia, Tay-Sachs Disease, Gaucher Disease, Herlitz Junctional Epidermolysis Bullosa • Many more…

Pharmacogenomics • Drug metabolism What can you get tested?

The more dubious stuff… • Matchmaking / Personality Compatibility • Biocompatibility • Neurocompatibility • Psychological compatibility • Relationship compatibility • Physical chemistry • Social alignment

• Dating apps • Book sets

Instant Chemistry: Available at: https://instantchemistry.com/. Accessed 1/1/18 Pheramor: Available at: https://www.pheramor.com/science. Accessed 7/29/19 What can you get tested?

The more dubious stuff… • Inborn/Child Talent • Optimism, risk-taking, shyness, literature, reading ability, alcoholism, sentimentality, height, sensitivity to second-hand smoke, IQ, EQ, split personality, self control, moldability, drawing, dancing, propensity for teenage romance, etc.

• Paternity / Infidelity testing • “Discreet” testing

Map My Gene: Available at: http://www.mapmygene.com/services/talent-gene-test/. Map MY Gene: Available at: http://www.mapmygene.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/MAP-MY-GENE-Brochure_Inggris_Singapore_FA-1.pdf All About Truth DNA Services: Available at: http://allabouttruthdna.com/other-testing-services/infidelity-dna-testing. Accessed 1/1/18 Sound Familiar? “Recreational Genomics” What are the benefits and concerns about DTC genetic testing? The Grand Idea & Appeal of DTCGT

• Affordable, accessible, and user-friendly • Testing privacy within your home • Learn surprising and fun information re: yourself • Extra information will increase patient engagement • Potentially identify contributors to health risk early • Proactively change behaviors and habits • Proactively help your health care provider

Why not?

Burke W et al. Ann Intern Med. 2016;164(8):564-565. But buyer, beware. Tempting and leading messaging

ORIG3N: Available at: https://orig3n.com/why-dna-tests/. Accessed 1/1/18 Technical Concerns of DTC Genetic Testing

Analytical validity • Accuracy of the test & the staff/laboratory running them

Clinical validity • Relevance of the test to disease

Clinical utility • Helpfulness of the test for disease diagnosis, management, prevention

Who’s selecting, performing, and interpreting the tests??

Genetics Home Reference. Available at: https://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/primer/testing/validtest. Accessed 1/1/18. Well, someone must be regulating this, right? 2006-2008: A Period of Investigation • GAO investigation of online DTCGT companies • CDC, FDA, FTC consumer alerts • Claims of benefit • Reliability and quality • Recommendations • Specialized laboratory testing • Result interpretation by trained health care personnel • Some states order DTC companies to obtain CLIA licenses A Story of Fits and Starts

Summer 2010: Response to Expansion • Pathway Genomics + Walgreens announce partnership to sell OTC kits • FDA announces intent to regulate • Medical devices? Potential legal action • Walgreens withdraws • Congressional investigation into DTCGT companies1 • GAO releases damning investigation outcomes2

2013 • 23andMe ordered to stop selling “health-risk” service3

1. US Government Printing Office. Available at: https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-111hhrg78125/pdf/CHRG-111hhrg78125.pdf. Accessed 1/22/18 2. Government Accountability Office. Available at: https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-847T. Accessed 1/1/18 3. Food and Drug Administration. Available at: https://www.fda.gov/ICECI/EnforcementActions/WarningLetters/ucm376296.htm. Accessed 1/1/18 DTC Testing: Fits and Starts

“De novo premarket review pathway” • Pathway for future tests/companies • Expectations on test accuracy, reliability, clinical relevance • Not for diagnostic tests • Not for diagnosing or informing treatment decisions

FDA. Available at: https://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom/PressAnnouncements/ucm551185.htm. Accessed 1/1/18. DTC Testing: Fits and Starts

FDA. https://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/fda-authorizes-first-direct-consumer-test-detecting-genetic-variants-may-be-associated-medication. Accessed 7/30/19. DTC Testing: Fits and Starts

FDA. https://www.fda.gov/medical-devices/safety-communications/fda-warns-against-use-many-genetic-tests-unapproved-claims-predict-patient-response-specific. Accessed 7/30/19. DTC Testing: Fits and Starts

FDA. https://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/fda-issues-warning-letter-genomics-lab-illegally-marketing-genetic-test-claims-predict-patients. Accessed 7/30/19. DTC Testing: Fits and Starts

360Dx. https://www.360dx.com/regulatory-news/inova-decides-end-pgx-test-offerings-response-fda-warning-letter. Accessed 7/31/19. Driving a wedge?

Sharing test results • 63% planned to share results with a healthcare provider • 27% did

Inverse satisfaction with HCP after discussion • Knowledge • Willingness to discuss results • HCP willingness to incorporate results • Trust in HCP interpretation

Consistent trust in DTC testing company interpretation

van der Wouden et al. Ann Intern Med. 2016;164(8):513-522. Consequences: Tales of a Google search

• Whoops. How [company] Outed Parents Who Gave Their Baby Up For Adoption. • [Company] has a problem when it comes to ancestry reports for people of color • With genetic testing, I gave my parents the gift of divorce • How Reliable Are Home DNA Ancestry Tests? Investigation Uses Triplets to Find Out • Patients less excited about DNA tests if insurers see results • [Company], which sold dubious DNA tests to predict addiction risk, sells off assets as CEO departs amid criminal probe • Genetic testing firms filing for bankruptcy deprive CMS of hundreds of millions Consequences • Where? • Low-income housing, senior centers, health fairs, antique shops • How? • Cold calls, door knocking, email, Craigslist, social media ads • Freebies: food, gift cards • Fear of terminal illness, memory issues, trust • Prescriber kickbacks • Outcome? • Medicare fraud • Unnecessary testing • Identity theft

NBC News. https://www.nbcnews.com/health/aging/genetic-testing-scam-targets-seniors-rips-medicare-n1037186. Accessed 7/31/19. The Pharmacist’s Role

Aaron Bacall: “Here’s My DNA sequence”, 2000 The Pharmacist’s Role

American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (2014) • Leadership role • Ordering, reporting, and interpreting PGx tests • Design workflow processes • Research endeavors • All pharmacists should have basic understanding of PGx

Support from other healthcare disciplines (i.e., genetic counselors) for significant pharmacist role.

American Society of Health System Pharmacists. Am J Health-Syst Pharm. 2015; 72:579-81 Mills et al. Pharmacogenomics. 2013;8:957-68 67 Pre-Test Counseling

What PGx testing can/can’t do • Clinical utility, benefits, limitations, risks • Potential benefit in improving medication management • Results may have lifelong relevance

Assess health literacy and previous exposure

Differences between types of testing • Disease risk (likelihood of contacting a particular disease) • Medication response (drug-gene interactions, changes in efficacy/adverse effects)

Zierhut et al. Pharmacotherapy. 2017;37(9):990-9. 68 Post-Test Counseling

Discuss test results & what they mean • Genotype to phenotype translation • Define terms used in testing • Everyone has variations in genetic code: more or less doesn’t mean good or bad

Impact on medication selection • Doesn’t mean a currently effective medicine needs to be changed

Impact of non-genetic factors • Other health conditions drug-drug interactions, age, diet, exercise

Zierhut et al. Pharmacotherapy. 2017;37(9):990-9. 69 Counseling: DTC Genetic Testing

• Disease risk is multifactorial: Genetics is one component

• State of the industry • Relaxing regulation, but largely unregulated (test development and procedures)

• Nuances of test assumptions, interpretation, recommendations • Wide range of claims are made (many unverified, unproven) • Limited number of variants usually tested • Are the results really relevant to the individual patient? • What do “negative,” “normal,” “risk,” “likelihood” mean? • Are behavioral, diet, treatment recommendations evidence-based? • NOT diagnostic! – SHOULD NOT INFLUENCE DIAGNOSIS OR TREATMENT Counseling: DTC Genetic Testing

• Discuss the relevance of DTC testing with HCPs • Understand the results and understand if they’re meaningful • Usefulness and limits • Benefits and risks

• Patient privacy/Data Use/Integrity • Read what you’re consenting to (present and future) • Attached strings (ex: research participation, what happens next?) • Consequences of partnerships, mergers/acquisitions, and collaboration • Hacking, law enforcement

• Pharmacy technicians  First line triage of patient interest and behavior Take-Home Points

1. Precision health will advance person-specific management of individual health, and pharmacists will increasingly encounter pharmacogenetics- related questions in the future. 2. CPIC and PharmGKB are evidence-based resources to help interpret pharmacogenetic test results. 3. Although DTC genetic testing is increasingly accessible, it is largely unregulated, risks are involved, the claims can be questionable, and results can be easily misinterpreted. 4. Genetic testing is not a crystal ball. Other clinical factors must be considered. 5. All pharmacists must maintain a basic understanding of PGx to appropriately provide recommendations for drug therapy and guide patients on the utility of genetic testing. Interested in more? Certificate Programs • American Society of Health-System Pharmacists • University of Colorado Graduate Degree Programs • University of Florida • Manchester University Conferences • Professional meetings • University of Florida Precision Medicine Conference Online resources • Genetics/Genomics Competency Center (G2C2) – genomicseducation.net • Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium (CPIC) – cpicpgx.org • National Institutes of Health Genetics Home Reference – ghr.nlm.nih.gov • PharmGKB – pharmgkb.org Post-graduate training • PGY-2 residency • Fellowship Thank you. Questions? [email protected]

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