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Drug racing: gene tied to HIV-drug response.


A genetic mutation Noun 1. genetic mutation - (genetics) any event that changes genetic structure; any alteration in the inherited nucleic acid sequence of the genotype of an organism
chromosomal mutation, mutation
 seven times as common in blacks as in whites increases the odds that people taking a common HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States.  medicine will surfer side effects Side effects

Effects of a proposed project on other parts of the firm.
 that lead them to halt the treatment. Because the mutation slows metabolism of the drug efavirenz efavirenz /ef·a·vi·renz/ (ef´ah-vi?renz) an antiretroviral, inhibiting reverse transcriptase; used in the treatment of HIV infection.

e·fa·vir·enz
n.
, patients of either race who have the genetic trait might be better off receiving, from the start of therapy, only a low dose of efavirenz, says David W. Haas of Vanderbilt University Vanderbilt University, at Nashville, Tenn.; coeducational; chartered 1872 as Central Univ. of Methodist Episcopal Church, founded and renamed 1873, opened 1875 through a gift from Cornelius Vanderbilt. Until 1914 it operated under the auspices of the Methodist Church.  in Nashville.

Efavirenz is commonly a component of drug cocktails used to fight HIV, but it tan cause neurological problems such as disturbing dreams and dizziness. Haas and his colleagues, including Heather Ribaudo of the Harvard School of Public Heath in Boston, investigated several factors that might predict an individual's response to efavirenz.

The researchers gave a multidrug treatment that included efavirenz to 202 volunteers recently diagnosed with HIV. From individuals' responses to the drugs, the scientists calculated whether factors such as race, weight, and sex are associated with how quickly the body metabolizes efavirenz, how effectively the drug suppresses replication of HIV in blood, and how likely a person is to quit using the drug during the first 6 months of treatment.

Slow breakdown of a drug can be important for the effectiveness of treatment but can also increase the risk of side effects. Researchers already knew that heavy people tend to metabolize me·tab·o·lize
v.
1. To subject to metabolism.

2. To produce by metabolism.

3. To undergo change by metabolism.



metabolize

to subject to or be transformed by metabolism.
 efavirenz relatively quickly.

In the new study, only weight and race showed any statistical link with how quickly the volunteers cleared efavirenz from their blood, Ribaudo reported Feb. 11 in San Francisco at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections Opportunistic infections

Infections that cause a disease only when the host's immune system is impaired. The classic opportunistic infection never leads to disease in the normal host.
. People who cleared the drug slowly didn't benefit more from efavirenz treatment but were likelier to stop using the drug than other patients were, Ribaudo says.

The non-Hispanic white volunteers typically metabolized the drug 32 percent more rapidly than the volunteers of other ethnic groups did. To better understand that racial difference, the researchers analyzed four genes known to influence metabolism of other drugs. They found that one mutation, in a gene called CYP2B CYP2B Cytochrome P450 2B 6, slows efavirenz clearance and thereby nearly triples the average blood concentration of the drug, Haas says. The genetic trait, which occurs in 20 percent of blacks but only 3 percent of whites, also increases the risk of serious neurological side effects. One other mutation, found almost exclusively in blacks, was also associated with slower drug clearance.

The two genes account for the racial differences observed in efavirenz metabolism, Haas says.

Prescription guidelines tailored to genetics rather than race could personalize medicine, sacs Robert T. Schooley of the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center The University of Colorado Health Sciences Center (UCHSC) is part of the University of Colorado System. It has recently been merged with the University of Colorado at Denver (UCD) to form the University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center.  in Denver. Currently, federally funded studies of efavirenz and other HIV drugs must evaluate outcomes by racial and ethnic groups.

Those trials could become unnecessary, Schooley says, if doctors eventually could use specific genes, instead of a biologically ambiguous category such as race, to anticipate a patient's response to a drug.
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Title Annotation:Efavirenz
Author:Harder, B.
Publication:Science News
Date:Feb 21, 2004
Words:486
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