Back to Search Start Over

Predicting Range of Initial Warfarin Dose Based on Pharmacometabolomic and Genetic Inputs

Authors :
Demin Li
Haiwei Wu
Meng Wei
Cao Ling
Changtian Wang
Xueping Ma
Yanan Chu
Guohua Zhou
Qing Huang
Ling Xue
Luo Nan
Hanyu Qian
Lei Zhang
Lei Sun
Fan Xialei
Bingjie Zou
Liyan Miao
Qiang Zhou
Li Tan
Source :
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics. 110:1585-1594
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Anticoagulation response to warfarin during the initial stage of therapy varies among individuals. In this study, we aimed to combine pharmacometabolomic and pharmacogenetic data to predict interindividual variation in warfarin response, and, on this basis, suggest an initial daily dose range. The baseline metabolic profiles, genotypes, and clinical information of 160 patients with heart valve disease served as the variables of the function of the last international normalized ratio measured before a patient's discharge (INRday7 ) to screen for potential biomarkers. The partial least-squares model showed that two baseline metabolites (uridine and guanosine), one single-nucleotide variation (VKORC1), and four clinical parameters (weight, creatinine level, amiodarone usage, and initial daily dose) had good predictive power for INRday7 (R2 = 0.753 for the training set, 0.643 for the test set). With these biomarkers, a machine learning algorithm (two-dimensional linear discriminant analysis-multinomial logit model) was used to predict the subgroups with extremely warfarin-sensitive or less warfarin-sensitive patients with a prediction accuracy of 91% for the training set and 90% for the test set, indicating that individual responses to warfarin could be effectively predicted. Based on this model, we have successfully designed an algorithm,"IniWarD," for predicting an effective dose range in the initial 7-day warfarin therapy. The results indicate that the daily dose range suggested by the IniWarD system is more appropriate than that of the conventional genotype-based method, and the risk of bleeding or thrombus due to warfarin could thus be avoided.

Details

ISSN :
15326535 and 00099236
Volume :
110
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0643b3886840563744c4f34673f7c2bb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cpt.2407