Abstract

Background

Many pharmacological treatments are considered effective in the treatment of panic disorder (PD), however, about 20 to 40% of the patients have treatment-resistant PD. Pharmacogenetics could explain why some patients are treatment-resistant.

Objective

Our objective was to gather preliminary data on the clinical usefulness of pharmacogenetic testing in this disorder.

Methods

Twenty patients with treatment-resistant PD were included in this observational study and submitted to commercial pharmacogenetic testing. Testing panel included gene polymorphisms related to CYP, genes EPHX1, UGT1A4, UGT2B15, ABCB1, ADRA2A, ANKK1, COMT, DRD2, FKBP5, GRIK4, GSK3B, HTR1A, HTR2A, HTR2C, MC4R, OPRM1, SCN1A, SLC6A4 and MTHFR. Participants received treatment-as-usual for PD before being enrolled in this study, including first-line and second-line medications for PD.

Results

In 30% of the patients, the tests indicated reduced chance of response to the prescribed drug, while they indicated very low serum levels of the prescribed drug in 20% of the subjects. The pharmacogenetic tests predicted reduction of MTHFR enzyme activity in 74% of the patients. ABCB1 gene alleles associated to drug resistance were found in 90% of the samples.

Conclusion

Commercial pharmacogenetic testing failed to predict negative treatment outcome in most patients with PD. The association between treatment-resistance in PD and the genes CYP2C19, MTHFR and ABCB1 deserves further study.

Keywords: Treatment-resistant anxiety disorder, Folic acid, Pharmacokinetics, Neuropharmacology, Cytochrome P450, Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase, ABCB1 protein.
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