PharmVar Tutorial on CYP2D6 Structural Variation Testing and Recommendations on Reporting.
Amy J TurnerCharity NofzigerBronwyn E RameyReynold C LyChad A BousmanJosé A G AgúndezKatrin SangkuhlMichelle Whirl-CarrilloSimone VanoniHenry M DunnenbergerGualberto RuanoMartin A KennedyMichael S PhillipsHouda HachadTeri E KleinAnn M MoyerAndrea GaedigkPublished in: Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics (2023)
The Pharmacogene Variation Consortium (PharmVar) provides nomenclature for the highly polymorphic human CYP2D6 gene locus and a comprehensive summary of structural variation. CYP2D6 contributes to the metabolism of numerous drugs and thus, genetic variation in its gene impacts drug efficacy and safety. To accurately predict a patient's CYP2D6 phenotype, testing must include structural variants including gene deletions, duplications, hybrid genes, and combinations thereof. This tutorial offers a comprehensive overview of CYP2D6 structural variation, terms and definitions, a review of methods suitable for their detection and characterization, and practical examples to address the lack of standards to describe CYP2D6 structural variants or any other pharmacogene. This PharmVar tutorial offers practical guidance on how to detect the many, often complex, structural variants, as well as recommends terms and definitions for clinical and research reporting. Uniform reporting is not only essential for electronic health record-keeping but also for accurate translation of a patient's genotype into phenotype which is typically utilized to guide drug therapy.