A polymorphism in the VKORC1 regulator calumenin predicts higher warfarin dose requirements in African Americans
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics
Abstract
Warfarin demonstrates a wide interindividual variability in response that is mediated partly by variants in cytochrome P450 2C9 (CYP2C9) and vitamin K 2,3-epoxide reductase complex subunit 1 (VKORC1). It is not known whether variants in calumenin (CALU) (vitamin K reductase regulator) have an influence on warfarin dose requirements. We resequenced CALU regions in a discovery cohort of dose outliers: patients with high (>90th percentile, n = 55) or low (<10th percentile, n = 53) warfarin dose requirements (after accounting for known genetic and nongenetic variables). One CALU variant, rs339097, was associated with high doses (P = 0.01). We validated this variant as a predictor of higher warfarin doses in two replication cohorts: (i) 496 patients of mixed ethnicity and (ii) 194 African-American patients. The G allele of rs339097 (the allele frequency was 0.14 in African Americans and 0.002 in Caucasians) was associated with the requirement for a 14.5% (SD±7%) higher therapeutic dose (P = 0.03) in the first replication cohort and a higher-than-predicted dose in the second replication cohort (allele frequency 0.14, one-sided P = 0.03). CALU rs339097 A>G is associated with higher warfarin dose requirements, independent of known genetic and nongenetic predictors of warfarin dose in African Americans. © 2010 American Society2010 American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics.
First Page
445
Last Page
451
DOI
10.1038/clpt.2009.291
Publication Date
4-1-2010
Recommended Citation
Voora, D.; Koboldt, D. C.; King, C. R.; Lenzini, P. A.; Eby, C. S.; Porche-Sorbet, R.; Deych, E.; Crankshaw, M.; Milligan, P. E.; McLeod, H. L.; Patel, S. R.; Cavallari, L. H.; Ridker, P. M.; Grice, G. R.; Miller, R. D.; and Gage, B. F., "A polymorphism in the VKORC1 regulator calumenin predicts higher warfarin dose requirements in African Americans" (2010). Pharmacy Practice Faculty Publications. 620.
https://doi.org/10.1038/clpt.2009.291
https://collections.uhsp.edu/pharm-practice_pubs/620