Impact of NFIB and CYP1A variants on clozapine serum concentration—A retrospective naturalistic cohort study on 526 patients with known smoking habits
Authors
Lenk, Hasan ÇağınLøvsletten Smith, Robert
O'Connell, Kevin
Jukić, Marin

Kringen, Marianne Kristiansen
Andreassen, Ole
Ingelman-Sundberg, Magnus

Molden, Espen

Article (Published version)
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Clinical response of clozapine is closely associated with serum concentration. Although tobacco smoking is the key environmental factor underlying interindividual variability in clozapine metabolism, recent genome-wide studies suggest that CYP1A and NFIB genetic variants may also be of significant importance, but their quantitative impact is unclear. We investigated the effects of the rs2472297 C>T (CYP1A) and rs28379954 T>C (NFIB) polymorphisms on serum concentrations in smokers and nonsmokers. The study retrospectively included 526 patients with known smoking habits (63.7% smokers) from a therapeutic drug monitoring service in Norway. Clozapine dose-adjusted concentrations (C/D) and patient proportions with subtherapeutic levels (<1070 nmol/L) were compared between CYP1A/NFIB variant allele carriers and homozygous wild-type carriers (noncarriers), in both smokers and nonsmokers. Clozapine C/D was reduced in patients carrying CYP1A-T and NFIB-C variants versus noncarriers, both among ...smokers (−48%; p < 0.0001) and nonsmokers (−35%; p = 0.028). Patients who smoke carrying CYP1A-T and NFIB-C variants had a 66% reduction in clozapine C/D versus nonsmoking noncarriers (p < 0.0001). The patient proportion with subtherapeutic levels was 2.9-fold higher in patients who smoke carrying NFIB-C and CYP1A-T variants versus nonsmoking noncarriers (p < 0.0001). In conclusion, CYP1A and NFIB variants have significant and additive impact on clozapine dose requirements for reaching target serum concentrations. Patients who smoke carrying the studied CYP1A and NFIB variants, comprising 2.5% of the study population, may need threefold higher doses to prevent risk of clozapine undertreatment. The results suggest that pre-emptive genotyping of NFIB and CYP1A may be utilized to guide clozapine dosing and improve clinical outcomes in patients with treatment-resistant schizophrenia. © 2022 The Authors. Clinical and Translational Science published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics.
Source:
Clinical and Translational Science, 2022Publisher:
- John Wiley and Sons Inc
Funding / projects:
- South- Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority (Grant number 2020019)
- The European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (Grant Agreement 964874/REALMENT)
- The Swedish Research Council (Grant number 2021- 02732)
DOI: 10.1111/cts.13422
ISSN: 1752-8054
WoS: 000864759100001
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85139426402
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PharmacyTY - JOUR AU - Lenk, Hasan Çağın AU - Løvsletten Smith, Robert AU - O'Connell, Kevin AU - Jukić, Marin AU - Kringen, Marianne Kristiansen AU - Andreassen, Ole AU - Ingelman-Sundberg, Magnus AU - Molden, Espen PY - 2022 UR - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4290 AB - Clinical response of clozapine is closely associated with serum concentration. Although tobacco smoking is the key environmental factor underlying interindividual variability in clozapine metabolism, recent genome-wide studies suggest that CYP1A and NFIB genetic variants may also be of significant importance, but their quantitative impact is unclear. We investigated the effects of the rs2472297 C>T (CYP1A) and rs28379954 T>C (NFIB) polymorphisms on serum concentrations in smokers and nonsmokers. The study retrospectively included 526 patients with known smoking habits (63.7% smokers) from a therapeutic drug monitoring service in Norway. Clozapine dose-adjusted concentrations (C/D) and patient proportions with subtherapeutic levels (<1070 nmol/L) were compared between CYP1A/NFIB variant allele carriers and homozygous wild-type carriers (noncarriers), in both smokers and nonsmokers. Clozapine C/D was reduced in patients carrying CYP1A-T and NFIB-C variants versus noncarriers, both among smokers (−48%; p < 0.0001) and nonsmokers (−35%; p = 0.028). Patients who smoke carrying CYP1A-T and NFIB-C variants had a 66% reduction in clozapine C/D versus nonsmoking noncarriers (p < 0.0001). The patient proportion with subtherapeutic levels was 2.9-fold higher in patients who smoke carrying NFIB-C and CYP1A-T variants versus nonsmoking noncarriers (p < 0.0001). In conclusion, CYP1A and NFIB variants have significant and additive impact on clozapine dose requirements for reaching target serum concentrations. Patients who smoke carrying the studied CYP1A and NFIB variants, comprising 2.5% of the study population, may need threefold higher doses to prevent risk of clozapine undertreatment. The results suggest that pre-emptive genotyping of NFIB and CYP1A may be utilized to guide clozapine dosing and improve clinical outcomes in patients with treatment-resistant schizophrenia. © 2022 The Authors. Clinical and Translational Science published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics. PB - John Wiley and Sons Inc T2 - Clinical and Translational Science T1 - Impact of NFIB and CYP1A variants on clozapine serum concentration—A retrospective naturalistic cohort study on 526 patients with known smoking habits DO - 10.1111/cts.13422 ER -
@article{ author = "Lenk, Hasan Çağın and Løvsletten Smith, Robert and O'Connell, Kevin and Jukić, Marin and Kringen, Marianne Kristiansen and Andreassen, Ole and Ingelman-Sundberg, Magnus and Molden, Espen", year = "2022", abstract = "Clinical response of clozapine is closely associated with serum concentration. Although tobacco smoking is the key environmental factor underlying interindividual variability in clozapine metabolism, recent genome-wide studies suggest that CYP1A and NFIB genetic variants may also be of significant importance, but their quantitative impact is unclear. We investigated the effects of the rs2472297 C>T (CYP1A) and rs28379954 T>C (NFIB) polymorphisms on serum concentrations in smokers and nonsmokers. The study retrospectively included 526 patients with known smoking habits (63.7% smokers) from a therapeutic drug monitoring service in Norway. Clozapine dose-adjusted concentrations (C/D) and patient proportions with subtherapeutic levels (<1070 nmol/L) were compared between CYP1A/NFIB variant allele carriers and homozygous wild-type carriers (noncarriers), in both smokers and nonsmokers. Clozapine C/D was reduced in patients carrying CYP1A-T and NFIB-C variants versus noncarriers, both among smokers (−48%; p < 0.0001) and nonsmokers (−35%; p = 0.028). Patients who smoke carrying CYP1A-T and NFIB-C variants had a 66% reduction in clozapine C/D versus nonsmoking noncarriers (p < 0.0001). The patient proportion with subtherapeutic levels was 2.9-fold higher in patients who smoke carrying NFIB-C and CYP1A-T variants versus nonsmoking noncarriers (p < 0.0001). In conclusion, CYP1A and NFIB variants have significant and additive impact on clozapine dose requirements for reaching target serum concentrations. Patients who smoke carrying the studied CYP1A and NFIB variants, comprising 2.5% of the study population, may need threefold higher doses to prevent risk of clozapine undertreatment. The results suggest that pre-emptive genotyping of NFIB and CYP1A may be utilized to guide clozapine dosing and improve clinical outcomes in patients with treatment-resistant schizophrenia. © 2022 The Authors. Clinical and Translational Science published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics.", publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Inc", journal = "Clinical and Translational Science", title = "Impact of NFIB and CYP1A variants on clozapine serum concentration—A retrospective naturalistic cohort study on 526 patients with known smoking habits", doi = "10.1111/cts.13422" }
Lenk, H. Ç., Løvsletten Smith, R., O'Connell, K., Jukić, M., Kringen, M. K., Andreassen, O., Ingelman-Sundberg, M.,& Molden, E.. (2022). Impact of NFIB and CYP1A variants on clozapine serum concentration—A retrospective naturalistic cohort study on 526 patients with known smoking habits. in Clinical and Translational Science John Wiley and Sons Inc.. https://doi.org/10.1111/cts.13422
Lenk HÇ, Løvsletten Smith R, O'Connell K, Jukić M, Kringen MK, Andreassen O, Ingelman-Sundberg M, Molden E. Impact of NFIB and CYP1A variants on clozapine serum concentration—A retrospective naturalistic cohort study on 526 patients with known smoking habits. in Clinical and Translational Science. 2022;. doi:10.1111/cts.13422 .
Lenk, Hasan Çağın, Løvsletten Smith, Robert, O'Connell, Kevin, Jukić, Marin, Kringen, Marianne Kristiansen, Andreassen, Ole, Ingelman-Sundberg, Magnus, Molden, Espen, "Impact of NFIB and CYP1A variants on clozapine serum concentration—A retrospective naturalistic cohort study on 526 patients with known smoking habits" in Clinical and Translational Science (2022), https://doi.org/10.1111/cts.13422 . .