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GWAS Study

Pharmacogenomics and Placebo Response in a Randomized Clinical Trial in Asthma.

Wang RS, Croteau-Chonka DC, Silverman EK et al.

31557306 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
250 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

WR
Wang RS
CD
Croteau-Chonka DC
SE
Silverman EK
LJ
Loscalzo J
WS
Weiss ST
HK
Hall KT
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Genetic variation may differentially modify drug and placebo treatment effects in randomized clinical trials. In asthma, although lung function and asthma control improvements are commonplace with placebo, pharmacogenomics of placebo vs. drug response remains unexamined. In a genomewide association study of subjective and objective outcomes with placebo treatment in Childhood Asthma Management Program of nedocromil/budesonide vs. placebo (N = 604), effect estimates for lead single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were compared across arms. The coughing/wheezing lead SNP, rs2392165 (β = 0.94; P = 1.10E-07) mapped to BBS9, a gene implicated in lung development that contains a lung function expression quantitative trait locus. The effect was attenuated with budesonide (Pinteraction = 1.48E-07), but not nedocromil (Pinteraction = 0.06). The lead forced vital capacity SNP, rs12930749 (β = -5.80; P = 1.47E-06), mapped to KIAA0556, a locus genomewide associated with respiratory diseases. The rs12930749 effect was attenuated with budesonide (Pinteraction = 1.32E-02) and nedocromil (Pinteraction = 1.09E-02). Pharmacogenomic analysis revealed differential effects with placebo and drug treatment that could potentially guide precision drug development in asthma.

250 European ancestry children

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

250
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
Chapter IV

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