Speaker 1: Welcome to the ASHP official podcast, your guide to  issues related to medication use, public health and the profession of pharmacy. 
Amey Hugg 00:14: Thank you for joining us for Therapeutic Thursdays  podcast. This podcast provides an opportunity to listen as members discuss  what's new and ongoing in the world of therapeutics. My name is Amey Hugg and  I'm the ASHP Director of the section of pharmacy Informatics and Technology and  I will be your host today for the ASHP Therapeutic Thursdays podcast. With me  today are Amy Sheehan
  and Khan Duong.  Amy's practice interests are evidence based medicine and formulary management  and she is the associate professor of pharmacy practice at Purdue university  college of pharmacy. She's a drug information specialist at Indiana university.  Khanh Duong is a pharm D candidate at Purdue university college of pharmacy.  Her practice areas are academia, ambulatory care and infectious diseases. Thank  you for joining us today, Amy and Khanh. Let's get started talking about  today's topic, clinical resources for precision medicine. Let's start with the  basics. What is precision medicine? Amy, can you share with us? 
Amy Sheehan 01:20: At this point, most listeners are familiar with the term  Precision Medicine which continues to be an emerging science with the potential  to significantly improve patient outcomes by tailoring drug therapy  recommendations based on individual pharmacogenomic data;  and this includes both drug selection as well  as drug dosing. The most common medications we typically think of with  clinically actionable recommendations based on pharmacogenomic data include  anticoagulants (warfarin and clopidogrel), antidepressants, antipsychotics, and  medications for the treatment of various types of cancer. with the widespread  use of commercial genetic testing kits (such as 23andMe) there is an increasing  likelihood that pharmacists may be presented with pharmacogenetic data from  their patients.  And this presents a  challenge in translating genetic test results into actionable prescribing  decisions.  Because this is an ever  evolving field, it is important for pharmacists to be able to know where they  can find a reputable information regarding   pharmacogenomics. 
Amey Hugg  02:45: And what types of specialized  resources are available to it?
Amy Sheehan  02:49: Well, there are multiple  resources available to help guide clinicians in providing these recommendations  and these can actually range from the FDA approved product labeling. Currently,  there are about 200 FDA-approved drugs that have genomic or other selected  biomarker information provided in various sections of the label. Of course  there are a standard tertiary resources such as Lexicomp or Micromedics that  may have information and we may need to go all the way to pre-clinical studies  that evaluate the pharmacologic effect of drugs in genomic variations. However,  the most useful resources for pharmacists that really provide clear evidence  based recommendations for these clinically actionable drug therapy  modifications PharmGKB and CPIC or C P I C. 
Amey Hugg  03:50: Okay. How about Khan? Can you  tell us more about PharmGKB, which is the pharmacogenomics knowledge database? 
Khanh Duong  03:58: Yes, definitely. The  pharmacogenomics knowledge database (also known as PharmGKB, which can be found  at www.pharmgkb.org) is a publicly available resource funded by the National  Institutes of Health, that collects, develops, and publishes information about  clinically actionable gene-drug associations. So the website include four  primary sections. Annotated drugs,  Curated Pathways, Clinical guideline annotations  and drug labels. For annotated drugs, the section compiles data on on the  relationship of single genetic variants for specific drugs. The database can be  searched by either the drug name and provides valuable information about how a  specific gene can affect a patient's response and the potential for adverse  effects that are associated with the genetic variant. PharmGKB curators  routinely review the  primary literature  to update this information for  Curated  Pathways, this section focuses on the PKPD of the medication. It presents  evidence-based diagrams and written descriptions of how the drug specifically  targeted at key genes that code for proteins. 
Khanh Duong  05:25: For the clinical guidelines  annotations, this section contains links to evidence-based guidelines for drug  dosing recommendation based onspecific genetic variant.  It includes links to guidelines published by  CPIC  or CPIC (the Clinical  Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium), the Royal Dutch Association for  the Advancement of Pharmacy-Pharmacogenetics Working Group, and the Canadian  Pharmacogenomics Network for Drug Safety.    A brief summary is normally provided for the recommendations for each  guideline. And lastly for the drug label annotations, this section contains  pharmacogenomic information provided with the medication label. The database  includes drug labels from the US FDA, the European Medicines Agency (EMA), as  well as medications marketed in Japan, Switzerland, and Canada. 
Amey Hugg  06:28: Oh, thank you for that. Can you  Khanh tell us more about the clinical pharmacogenomics implementation  consortium or [inaudible]? 
Khanh Duong 06:36: CPIC, stands for the Clinical  Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium. So it basically publishes  guidelines in cooperation with the journal Clinical Pharmacology and  Therapeutics that are available in PubMed and referenced in PharmGKB. CPIC can  be found at https://cpicpgx.org/. It is an international consortium of  scientists and clinicians with a primary goal of providing clinicians access to  freely available, peer-reviewed, evidence-based, and updated gene/drug clinical  practice guidelines. These guidelines are designed to help healthcare  professionals understand how available genetic test results should be used to  optimize drug therapy— not whether a genetic test should be conducted. CPIC  provides options for users to find guidelines using either medication names or  genetic variants in the search box.. The most up-to-date guideline is located  at the top of the page and the historical guidelines are located at the bottom  of the page. CPIC guidelines present therapeutic dosing recommendations that  are rated as “strong”, “moderate”, or “optional” based on the strength of  available evidence. 
Amey Huegg  07:59: Well great. Thank you for that.  How about Amy? I'm going to direct this question to you. How do you implement  genomics and practice?  I believe there's  an acronym for that called IGNITE. Can you tell us more about that? 
Amy Sheehan  08:11: Sure. Another great resource to  find information to support implementing genomic information into drug therapy  optimization is IGNITE. IGNITE stands for “Implementing Genomics in Practice”.  IGNITE is funded by NIH (National Institute of Health), and it is comprised of  five research sites, which are Indiana University, Mount Sinai, Duke  University, University of Florida, and Vanderbilt University. And the most  helpful part about the IGNITE website is that it  provides access to genomic resources for  pharmacists and clinicians through what is known as the SPARK Toolbox. And  this is actually an open SharePoint site  where clinicians can upload or download resources for implementation of  genomics into practice. And these documents include literature reviews at specific  institutional policies that support implementation, examples of clinical  decision support alerts, algorithms for genetic testing, billing codes, and  even lab fee information for pharmacogenomic tests among others . And this can  be found at available at gmkb.org/IGNITE.
Amey Hugg  10:43: That's great. So what kind of  resources or programs are available for a pharmacist to learn more about  precision medicine? Amy? 
Amy Sheehan  09:54: There are many resources  available for pharmacists to learn more about precision medicine.  ASHP actually offers an online self-guided  “Pharmacogenomics Certificate” program. ASHP Pharmacogenomics Educational  Series which is a free series of webinars for members that can be found on the  ASHP website  (ashp.org) underneath the  professional development link. The emerging sciences SAG also maintains a  pharmacogenomics resource center and there are links to articles, guidelines  webinars, as well as ASHP Midyear Clinical Meeting presentations that are  related to ppharmacogenomics. 
Amey Hugg  10:43: Thank you, Amy. That's all the  time we have for today. I want to take Amy Sheehan and Khanh Duong for joining  us today to discuss clinical resources for precision medicine. Join us here  every Thursday where we will be talking with ASHP member content matter experts  on a variety of clinical topics. Thank you. 
Speaker 1  11:03: Thank you for listening to  ASHPOfficial, the voice of pharmacists advancing healthcare. Be sure to visit  ashp.org/podcast to discover more great episodes, access show notes, and  download the episode transcript. If you loved the episode and want to hear  more, be sure to subscribe rate, or leave a review. Join us next time on  ASHPOfficial