4.6 Article

Gamma-glutamyl carboxylase and its influence on warfarin dose

Journal

THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS
Volume 104, Issue 4, Pages 750-754

Publisher

GEORG THIEME VERLAG KG
DOI: 10.1160/TH09-11-0763

Keywords

Gamma-glutamyl carboxylase; warfarin; pharmacogenetics; algorithm

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 HL074724, R01 HL097036, R01 HL57951, R01 HL58036]
  2. American Heart Association

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Via generation of vitamin K-dependent proteins, gamma-glutamyl carboxylase (GGCX) plays a critical role in the vitamin K cycle. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in GGCX, therefore, may affect dosing of the vitamin K antagonist, warfarin. In a multi-centered, cross-sectional study of 985 patients prescribed warfarin therapy, we genotyped for two GGCX SNPs (rs11676382 and rs12714145) and quantified their relationship to therapeutic dose. GGCX rs11676382 was a significant (p=0.03) predictor of residual dosing error and was associated with a 6.1% reduction in warfarin dose (95% CI: 0.6%-11.4%) per G allele. The prevalence was 14.1% in our predominantly (78%) Caucasian cohort, but the overall contribution to dosing accuracy was modest (partial R-2 = 0.2%). GGCX rs12714145 was not a significant predictor of therapeutic dose (p = 0.26). GGCX rs11676382 is a statistically significant predictor of warfarin dose, but the clinical relevance is modest. Given the potentially low marginal cost of adding this SNP to existing genotyping platforms, we have modified our non-profit website (www.WarfarinDosing.org) to accommodate knowledge of this variant.

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