4.2 Review

Pharmacogenomics in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease

Journal

PHARMACOGENOMICS
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages 421-437

Publisher

FUTURE MEDICINE LTD
DOI: 10.2217/PGS.10.4

Keywords

5-aminosalicylate; 6-mercaptopurine; azathioprine; drug metabolism; inflammatory bowel disease; infliximab; methotrexate; pharmacogenetics; pharmacogenomics; steroid; sulphasalazine

Funding

  1. Purine Research Fund
  2. Guy's and St Thomas' Charity
  3. Prometheus Laboratories

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In recent years, the benefits of early aggressive treatment paradigms for inflammatory bowel disease have emerged. Symptomatic improvement is no longer considered adequate; instead, the aim of treatment has become mucosal healing and altered natural history. Nonetheless, we still fail to achieve these end points in a large number of our patients. There are many reasons why patients fail to respond or develop toxicity when exposed to drugs used for inflammatory bowel disease, but genetic variation is likely to account for a significant proportion of this. Some examples, notably thiopurine methyltransferase polymorphism in thiopurine treatment, are already established in clinical practice. We present a review of the expanding literature in this field, highlighting many interesting developments in pharmacogenomics applied to inflammatory bowel disease and, where possible, providing guidance on the translation of these developments into clinical practice.

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