Pharmacogenomics
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Multicenter Study
HLA-B locus in Japanese patients with anti-epileptics and allopurinol-related Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis.
Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS) and toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) are rare but life-threatening severe cutaneous adverse reactions. Recently, strong associations of HLA-B*1502 and HLA-B*5801 with carbamazepine- and allopurinol-induced severe cutaneous adverse reactions were found in Han Chinese patients, respectively, but ethnic differences in the associations have been reported. The objective of this study is to clarify the involvement of HLA-B*1502 and HLA-B*5801 in Japanese SJS/TEN patients. ⋯ While HLA-B*1502 is unlikely to be associated with carbamazepine-related or aromatic anti-epileptic agent-related SJS/TEN, HLA-B*5801 was significantly associated with allopurinol-related SJS/TEN in Japanese.
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Malignant hyperthermia (MH) is a pharmacogenetic disorder triggered by volatile anesthetics or depolarizing muscle relaxants in predisposed individuals. Exercise or stress-induced MH episodes, in the absence of any obvious pharmacological trigger, have been reported, but these are rare. ⋯ The results of such studies have identified commonalities in functional affects of mutations, and also uncovered unexpected complexities in both the structure and function of the skeletal muscle calcium-release channel. The following review is an attempt to provide a summary of the background to current MH research, and highlight some recent advances in our knowledge of the molecular basis of the phenotypic expression of this disorder.
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Clinical Trial
Analgesic requirements after major abdominal surgery are associated with OPRM1 gene polymorphism genotype and haplotype.
The association between SNPs of the human OPRM1 gene encoding the micro-opioid receptor and postoperative analgesic requirements in surgical patients remains controversial. Here, we evaluate whether any of the five tag SNPs (A118G, IVS2+G691C, IVS3+G5953A, IVS3+A8449G and TAA+A2109G) representing the four linkage disequilibrium blocks of the OPRM1 gene influences postoperative analgesic requirements. ⋯ These results suggest that OPRM1 gene tag SNP genotypes and haplotypes can primarily contribute to prediction of postoperative analgesic requirements in individual patients undergoing major open abdominal surgery.