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Copyright ©2013 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Gastroenterol. Dec 28, 2013; 19(48): 9156-9173
Published online Dec 28, 2013. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v19.i48.9156
Table 1 Effect of CYP3A4*1B single nucleotide polymorphism on tacrolimus pharmacokinetics
Ref.Study populationTransplant type/analysis of recipients, donors or bothFindings
Cho et al[84]70 KoreanKidney recipientsNo association between CYP3A4*1B genotype and tacrolimus dose requirements up to 6 mo after transplantation
Roy et al[85]38 Caucasian,4 Black,2 AsianKidney recipientsNo correlation between the CYP3A4*1B SNP and tacrolimus pharmacokinetic at first week and third month after transplantation
Hesselink et al[67]37 Caucasian,9 Black,18 AsianKidney recipientsCYP3A4*1B allele carriers had lower tacrolimus dose-adjusted trough levels with respect to patients carrying the wild-type (*1/*1) genotype at third and 12th month after transplantationThis effect was not observed when analyzing only the Caucasian population.
Hesselink et al[87]120 Caucasian, 7 Black,8 Asian,1 otherKidney recipientsNo significant correlation observed between CYP3A4*1B SNP and tacrolimus pharmacokinetics when CYP3A5 and ABCB1 SNPs were taken into account
Gervasini et al[33]103 SpanishKidney recipientsCarriers of the CYP3A4*1B variant allele had 59% lower tacrolimus concentrations than those with CYP3A4*1/*1 wild type genotypeAll CYP3A4*1B carriers were also carriers of CYP3A5*1 allele (linkage disequilibrium)
Table 2 Effect of CYP3A5*3 single nucleotide polymorphism on tacrolimus pharmacokinetics
Ref.Study populationTransplant type/analysis of recipients, donors or bothFindings
Barrera-Pulido et al[94]53 CaucasianLiver recipients and donorsCYP3A5*1/*3 recipients with *1/*3 donor livers had lower than minimum required blood tacrolimus levels at 1 mo after transplantation*3/*3 recipients with *1/*3 donors had significantly greater tacrolimus dose requirements at 1 and 2 mo after transplantation
Chakkera et al[95]24 native American and Caucasian control groupKidney recipientsNative Americans had lower tacrolimus dose requirements than Caucasians at 1 mo after transplantationNative Americans more commonly expressed CYP3A5*3/*3No difference in blood trough levels or nephropathy between the two groups
Provenzani et al[91]32 CaucasianLiver recipients and donorsDose requirements significantly higher in the case of donors with the CYP3A5*1 allele at 1, 3 and 6 mo after transplantationNo statistically significant difference in dose requirements considering recipient’s genotypes
Provenzani et al[92]101 CaucasianKidney (n = 50, recipients) and liver (n = 51, recipients and donors)CYP3A5*1 allele in liver donors (n = 51) had a significant effect of decrease on tacrolimus dose-adjusted trough levels at 1, 3 and 6 mo after transplantation. No statistically significant difference in dose requirements considering recipient’s genotypeTacrolimus dose in kidney recipients (n = 50) with CYP3A5*3/*3 genotype was significantly lower than in patients with at least one copy of the wild type allele
Cho et al[84]70 KoreanKidney recipientsThose patients who had CYP3A5*1/*3 or *1/*1 genotypes had 80% higher tacrolimus dose requirements than patients homozygotes for *3 allele (up to 6 mo after transplantation)
Glowacki et al[96]209 FrenchKidney recipientsPatients with at least one copy of the CYP3A5*1 allele had significantly higher dose requirements and lower blood trough levels than patients homozygous for the *3 alleleNo influence of this SNP on rejection or graft dysfunction rates.
Goto et al[63]181 JapaneseLiver recipients and donorsPatients with the CYP3A5*3/*3 genotype had reduced levels of CYP3A5 mRNADose-adjusted tacrolimus trough levels decreased in patients receiving a liver with the *1/*1 genotype
Wei-Lin et al[88]50 ChineseLiver recipients and donorsThose patients receiving a liver with the *3/*3 genotype had, at first month after transplantation, significantly higher tacrolimus dose-adjusted trough levels than those with at least one copy of the *1 allele
López-Montenegro Soria et al[97]35 SpanishKidney recipientsConcentration/dose ratios were remarkably lower in patients with at least one copy of the *1 allele than in patients homozygous for the *3 allele
Shi et al[66]216 ChineseLiver recipientsRecipients with *1/*1 genotype had higher dosage requirements than those with *3/*3 genotypeThe study suggested also that CYP3A5 enzymatic activity is increased proportionally by the presence of the *1 allele
Jun et al[98]568 KoreanKidney and liver recipients (n = 506), and liver donors (n = 62)Patients with the *3 alleles had higher tacrolimus dose-adjusted trough levels than patients with the *1 allele*1/*1 patients may be more rapid metabolizers than *1 heterozygous patients
Elens et al[99]150 BelgianLiver donorsThose patients with at least one *1 allele had at least 67% higher tacrolimus dose requirementsNo influence of CYP3A5 expression on tacrolimus hepatic concentrations
Macphee et al[100]119 White,23 Black,26 South Asian,12 Middle EasternKidney recipientsPatients with at least one copy of the wild-type *1 allele achieved twofold lower dose-normalized tacrolimus blood concentrations compared with CYP3A5*3/*3 homozygote patients
Thervet et al[101]168 Caucasian, 8 Black, 12 otherKidney recipientsPre-transplant dose adaptation, according to CYP3A5 genotype, is associated with improved achievement of the target blood trough levels
Spierings et al[102]81 Caucasian, 12 Black, 20 South Asian, 5 otherKidney recipientsTacrolimus dose requirements were significantly higher in patients expressing the wild type CYP3A5 genotypeIntra-patient variability of tacrolimus clearance was not associated with the same genotype
Chen et al[103]120 ChineseKidney recipientsCYP3A5 expressers not receiving diltiazem required significantly higher tacrolimus doses than those who received the CYP inhibitor. In non-expressers, no significant difference in tacrolimus dose requirements was observed between the subjects treated with diltiazem and those who were not
Table 3 Effect of ABCB1 single nucleotide polymorphism on tacrolimus pharmacokinetics
Ref.Study populationTransplant type/analysis of recipients, donors or bothFindings
Provenzani et al[91]32 CaucasianLiver recipients and donorsNo influence of 3435C>T and 2677G>T SNPs on tacrolimus dose requirements
Cho et al[84]70 KoreanKidney recipientsNo association between ABCB1 genotype and tacrolimus dose requirements
Shi et al[66]216 ChineseLiver recipientsNo association between any ABCB1 SNPs and tacrolimus dose requirements or blood trough levels
Jun et al[98]568 KoreanKidney and liver recipients (n = 506), and liver donors (n = 62)No correlation between ABCB1 genotype and tacrolimus dose-adjusted blood trough levels
Gervasini et al[33]103 SpanishKidney recipientsNone of the ABCB1 polymorphisms were associated with changes in dose-adjusted blood trough levels and in dose requirementsNo association between ABCB1 genotype and tacrolimus-induced toxicity
Kuypers et al[104]304 BelgianKidney recipientsNo significant impact of ABCB1 genotype on tacrolimus exposure parameters or dosing requirements
Provenzani et al[92]101 CaucasianKidney (n = 50) and liver (n = 51, recipients and donors)No ABCB1 influence on dosing in liver transplant patientsThose patients receiving kidney transplant carrying the 2677T/A allele required significantly higher doses than those patients with the wild type allele
Goto et al[63]181 JapaneseLiver recipients and donorsIn the first week after transplantation, the recipients with wild type ABCB1 allele had lower tacrolimus dose-adjusted blood trough levelsNo difference observed after 2 wk
Herrero et al[43]71 SpanishKidney recipientsPatients with wild type ABCB1 alleles had more stable tacrolimus concentrations within the therapeutic range during the first 3 moOn the contrary, patients carrying the polymorphic ABCB1 alleles showed a mean increase in tacrolimus blood concentration of more than 60%
Wei-Lin et al[88]50 ChineseLiver recipients and donorsRecipients with the wild type ABCB1-3435CC allele had significantly higher tacrolimus dose requirements than those with C3435T at 1 and 2 wk and 1 mo after transplantation
López-Montenegro Soria et al[97]35 SpanishKidney recipientsWild type ABCB1 3435CC patients had 40% lower concentration/dose ratios than those patients with variant alleles
Elens et al[99]150 BelgianLiver donorsABCB1 genetic polymorphisms significantly influence tacrolimus hepatic concentrations, but have no effect on tacrolimus blood levelsPatients with ABCB1 1236C>T polymorphism showed significantly better liver functions and lower Banff scores with respect to patients with the wild-type allele
Table 4 Effect of various single nucleotide polymorphisms on tacrolimus pharmacodynamics
Ref.Study populationTransplant type/analysis of recipients, donors or bothFindings
Jun et al[98]568 KoreanKidney and liver recipients (n = 506), and liver donors (n = 62)No difference in incidence of organ rejection between different genotypes
Chen et al[103]120 ChineseKidney recipientsPatients that received genotype-guided initial tacrolimus dosing vs standard protocol dose were more likely to achieve target drug levelsNo influence on incidence of adverse effects between CYP3A5 expressers and non-expressers
Jacobson et al[105]945 (different ethnicities)Kidney recipientsEvery increase in tacrolimus blood trough level of 1 ng/mL increased the risk of early tacrolimus nephrotoxicity by 22%Polymorphism was not associated with an increased or decreased risk of tacrolimus-related nephrotoxicity
Kuypers et al[106]273 White,3 Hispanic,24 North African,2 African,2 AsianKidney recipientsDelayed graft function was associated with higher initial mean tacrolimus blood trough levels and lower tacrolimus daily dose requirements, especially in CYP3A5 non-expressersCYP3A5 expressers may be at lower risk of new-onset diabetes after transplant (NODAT) due to diminished exposure to potentially toxic tacrolimus levels
Kuypers et al[104]273 White,3 Hispanic,24 North African,2 African,2 AsianKidney recipientsPatients expressing the CYP3A5*1 allele and a functional CYP3A5 enzyme may be predisposed to developing calcineurin-inhibitor-associated nephrotoxicity (CNIT) following transplantation due to greater daily tacrolimus dose requirementsThis was observed especially in patients continuing corticosteroid therapy The incidence of delayed graft function and post-transplant diabetes mellitus was not different between CYP3A5 expressers and non-expressers
Chen et al[107]319 HispanicKidney recipientsSNPs in the cytoplasmic NFATc4 gene may confer a certain protection or also predisposition for NODAT. Patients carrying the T allele and the T-T-T-T-G haplotype showed a trend of protection from NODAT while patients with the C-C-C-G-G haplotype were associated with an increased risk of NODATThe use of sirolimus and tacrolimus and advanced age were also possibly correlated in development of NODAT
Cho et al[84]70 KoreanKidney recipientsHigher drug-related toxicity in patients with the CYP3A5*1 allele than in those with the CYP3A5*3 SNPNo difference in graft survival between the two genotypes
Barrera-Pulido et al[94]53 SpanishLiver recipients and donorsPatients with CYP3A5*3/*3 allele receiving livers with an ABCB1 SNP had lower frequency of renal dysfunction, same rejection rate and higher diabetes rate
Shi et al[66]216 ChineseLiver recipientsPatients with the CPY3A5*3 allele had greater risk of early renal injury than the patients with the *1 allele