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Dive into the research topics where Cristi R. King is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristi R. King.


Blood | 2008

CYP4F2 genetic variant alters required warfarin dose.

Michael D. Caldwell; Tarif Awad; Julie A. Johnson; Brian F. Gage; Mat Falkowski; Paul Gardina; Jason Hubbard; Yaron Turpaz; Taimour Y. Langaee; Charles S. Eby; Cristi R. King; Amy M. Brower; John R. Schmelzer; Ingrid Glurich; Humberto Vidaillet; Steven H. Yale; Kai Qi Zhang; Richard L. Berg; James K. Burmester

Warfarin is an effective, commonly prescribed anticoagulant used to treat and prevent thrombotic events. Because of historically high rates of drug-associated adverse events, warfarin remains underprescribed. Further, interindividual variability in therapeutic dose mandates frequent monitoring until target anticoagulation is achieved. Genetic polymorphisms involved in warfarin metabolism and sensitivity have been implicated in variability of dose. Here, we describe a novel variant that influences warfarin requirements. To identify additional genetic variants that contribute to warfarin requirements, screening of DNA variants in additional genes that code for drug-metabolizing enzymes and drug transport proteins was undertaken using the Affymetrix drug-metabolizing enzymes and transporters panel. A DNA variant (rs2108622; V433M) in cytochrome P450 4F2 (CYP4F2) was associated with warfarin dose in 3 independent white cohorts of patients stabilized on warfarin representing diverse geographic regions in the United States and accounted for a difference in warfarin dose of approximately 1 mg/day between CC and TT subjects. Genetic variation of CYP4F2 was associated with a clinically relevant effect on warfarin requirement.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2007

Pharmacogenetic Assessment of Toxicity and Outcome After Platinum Plus Taxane Chemotherapy in Ovarian Cancer: The Scottish Randomised Trial in Ovarian Cancer

Sharon Marsh; James Paul; Cristi R. King; Gillian Gifford; Howard L. McLeod; Robert Brown

PURPOSE Standard therapy for advanced ovarian cancer consists of a platinum agent in combination with a taxane, which has a 5-year survival rate of approximately 45%. The large individual variability for ovarian cancer patients in both outcome and toxicity risk from chemotherapy makes the identification of pharmacogenetic markers that can be used to screen patients before therapy selection an attractive prospect. PATIENTS AND METHODS We assessed 27 selected polymorphisms based on previously described associations or putative functional effects in 16 key genes from pathways that may influence cellular sensitivity to taxanes (ABCB1, ABCC1, ABCC2, ABCG2, CDKN1A, CYP1B1, CYP2C8, CYP3A4, CYP3A5, MAPT, and TP53) and platinum (ABCC2, ABCG2, ERCC1, ERCC2, GSTP1, MPO, and XRCC1) using polymerase chain reaction and Pyrosequencing in 914 ovarian cancer patients from the Scottish Randomised Trial in Ovarian Cancer phase III trial who were treated at presentation with carboplatin and taxane regimens after cytoreductive surgery. RESULTS No reproducible significant associations between genotype and outcome or toxicity were found for any of the genes analyzed. Previously reported genotype associations could not be replicated in this large study of a well-defined patient population within one specific clinical trial. CONCLUSION There are no clear candidates for taxane/platinum pharmacogenetic markers. This study highlights the need for validation of putative genetic markers in large, well-defined clinical sample sets.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2004

ABCG2 Pharmacogenetics: Ethnic Differences in Allele Frequency and Assessment of Influence on Irinotecan Disposition

Floris A. de Jong; Sharon Marsh; Ron H.J. Mathijssen; Cristi R. King; Jaap Verweij; Alex Sparreboom; Howard L. McLeod

Purpose: The ATP-binding cassette transporter ABCG2 (breast cancer resistance protein) is an efflux protein that plays a role in host detoxification of various xenobiotic substrates, including the irinotecan metabolite 7- ethyl-10-hydroxycamptothecin (SN-38). The ABCG2 421C>A polymorphism has been associated with reduced protein expression and altered function in vitro. The aim of this study was to evaluate the ethnic distribution and potential functional consequence of the ABCG2 421C>A genotype in cancer patients treated with irinotecan. Experimental Design: ABCG2 genotyping was performed using Pyrosequencing on DNA from 88 American Caucasians, 94 African Americans, 938 Africans, and 95 Han Chinese, as well as in 84 European Caucasian patients treated with irinotecan undergoing additional blood sampling for pharmacokinetic studies. Results: Significant differences in allele frequencies were observed between the given world populations (P < 0.001), the variant allele being most common in the Han Chinese population with a frequency as high as 34%. The mean area under the curve of irinotecan and SN-38 were 19,851 and 639 ng × hour/mL, respectively. The frequency of the variant allele (10.7%) was in line with results in American Caucasians. No significant changes in irinotecan pharmacokinetics were observed in relation to the ABCG2 421C>A genotype, although one of two homozygous variant allele carriers showed extensive accumulation of SN-38 and SN-38 glucuronide. Conclusions: The ABCG2 421C>A polymorphism appears to play a limited role in the disposition of irinotecan in European Caucasians. It is likely that the contribution of this genetic variant is obscured by a functional role of other polymorphic proteins.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Pharmacogenetic Predictors of Adverse Events and Response to Chemotherapy in Metastatic Colorectal Cancer: Results From North American Gastrointestinal Intergroup Trial N9741

Howard L. McLeod; Daniel J. Sargent; Sharon Marsh; Erin M. Green; Cristi R. King; Charles S. Fuchs; Ramesh K. Ramanathan; Stephen K. Williamson; Brian Findlay; Stephen N. Thibodeau; Axel Grothey; Roscoe F. Morton; Richard M. Goldberg

PURPOSE With three available chemotherapy drugs for advanced colorectal cancer (CRC), response rate (RR) and survival outcomes have improved with associated morbidity, accentuating the need for tools to select optimal individualized treatment. Pharmacogenetics identifies the likelihood of adverse events or response based on variants in genes involved in drug transport, metabolism, and cellular targets. PATIENTS AND METHODS Germline DNA was extracted from 520 patients on the North American Gastrointestinal Intergroup N9741 study. Three study arms were evaluated: IFL (fluorouracil [FU] + irinotecan [IRN]), FOLFOX (FU + oxaliplatin), and IROX (IRN + oxaliplatin). Information on adverse events, response, and disease-free survival was available. Thirty-four variants in 15 candidate genes for analysis based on previous associations with adverse events or outcome were assessed. Genotyping was performed using pyrosequencing. RESULTS All variants were polymorphic. The homozygous UGT1A1*28 allele observed in 9% of patients was associated with risk of grade 4 neutropenia in patients on IROX (55% v 15%; P = .002). Deletion in GSTM1 was associated with grade 4 neutropenia after FOLFOX (28% v 16%; P = .02). Patients with a homozygous variant genotype for GSTP1 were more likely to discontinue FOLFOX because of neurotoxicity (24% v 10%; P = .01). The presence of a CYP3A5 variant was significantly associated with RR on IFL (29% v 60%; P = .0074). Most previously published genotype-toxicity or -efficacy relationships were not validated in this study. CONCLUSION This study provides a platform to evaluate pharmacogenetic predictors of response or severe adverse events in advanced CRC. Pharmacogenetic studies can be conducted in multicenter trials, and our findings demonstrate that with continued research, clinical application is practical.


Journal of Human Genetics | 2004

Distribution of ITPA P32T alleles in multiple world populations

Sharon Marsh; Cristi R. King; Ranjeet Ahluwalia; Howard L. McLeod

AbstractDose-limiting toxicity from azathioprine treatment affects up to 37% of patients. Screening for thiopurine methyltransferase (TPMT) polymorphisms will prospectively identify approximately 10% of patients. Recently, a polymorphism in the inosine triphosphate pyrophosphatase gene (ITPA) has been associated with severe azathioprine toxicity. We demonstrate here that this proline to threonine substitution at codon 32 in the ITPA gene is found at low frequency in Central/South American populations (1-2%), at a constant frequency across Caucasian and African populations (6-7%), and is highest in Asian populations (14-19%). This data is consistent with previously described allele frequencies in other Caucasian (7%), African (5%), and Asian (11-15%) populations. This data provides a foundation on which prospective screening studies can be planned to identify patients at risk for severe toxicity from azathioprine therapy.


Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2008

Laboratory and Clinical Outcomes of Pharmacogenetic vs. Clinical Protocols for Warfarin Initiation in Orthopedic Patients

Petra Lenzini; Gloria R. Grice; Paul E. Milligan; Mary Beth Dowd; Sumeet Subherwal; Elena Deych; Charles S. Eby; Cristi R. King; Rhonda Porche-Sorbet; Claire V. Murphy; Renee Marchand; Eric A. Millican; Robert L. Barrack; John C. Clohisy; Kathryn Kronquist; Susan K. Gatchel; Brian F. Gage

Summary.  Background: Warfarin is commonly prescribed for prophylaxis and treatment of thromboembolism after orthopedic surgery. During warfarin initiation, out‐of‐range International Normalized Ratio (INR) values and adverse events are common. Methods: In orthopedic patients beginning warfarin therapy, we developed and prospectively validated pharmacogenetic and clinical dose refinement algorithms to revise the estimated therapeutic dose after 4 days of therapy. Results: The pharmacogenetic algorithm used the cytochrome P450 (CYP) 2C9 genotype, smoking status, peri‐operative blood loss, liver disease, INR values and dose history to predict the therapeutic dose. The R2 was 82% in a derivation cohort (n = 86) and 70% when used prospectively (n = 146). The R2 of the clinical algorithm that used INR values and dose history to predict the therapeutic dose was 57% in a derivation cohort (n = 178) and 48% in a prospective validation cohort (n = 146). In 1 month of prospective follow‐up, the percent time spent in the therapeutic range was 7% higher (95% CI: 2.7–11.7) in the pharmacogenetic cohort. The risk of a laboratory or clinical adverse event was also significantly reduced in the pharmacogenetic cohort (Hazard Ratio 0.54; 95% CI: 0.30–0.97). Conclusions: Warfarin dose adjustments that incorporate genotype and clinical variables available after four warfarin doses are accurate. In this non‐randomized, prospective study, pharmacogenetic dose refinements were associated with more time spent in the therapeutic range and fewer laboratory or clinical adverse events. To facilitate gene‐guided warfarin dosing we created a non‐profit website, http://www.WarfarinDosing.org.


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2010

A Polymorphism in the VKORC1 Regulator Calumenin Predicts Higher Warfarin Dose Requirements in African Americans

Deepak Voora; D C Koboldt; Cristi R. King; P A Lenzini; Charles S. Eby; Rhonda Porche-Sorbet; Elena Deych; M Crankshaw; Paul E. Milligan; Howard L. McLeod; Shitalben R. Patel; Larisa H. Cavallari; Paul M. Ridker; Gloria R. Grice; R D Miller; Brian F. Gage

Warfarin demonstrates a wide interindividual variability in response that is mediated partly by variants in cytochrome P450 2C9 (CYP2C9) and vitamin K 2,3‐epoxide reductase complex subunit 1 (VKORC1). It is not known whether variants in calumenin (CALU) (vitamin K reductase regulator) have an influence on warfarin dose requirements. We resequenced CALU regions in a discovery cohort of dose outliers: patients with high (>90th percentile, n = 55) or low (<10th percentile, n = 53) warfarin dose requirements (after accounting for known genetic and nongenetic variables). One CALU variant, rs339097, was associated with high doses (P = 0.01). We validated this variant as a predictor of higher warfarin doses in two replication cohorts: (i) 496 patients of mixed ethnicity and (ii) 194 African‐American patients. The G allele of rs339097 (the allele frequency was 0.14 in African Americans and 0.002 in Caucasians) was associated with the requirement for a 14.5% (SD ± 7%) higher therapeutic dose (P = 0.03) in the first replication cohort and a higher‐than‐predicted dose in the second replication cohort (allele frequency 0.14, one‐sided P = 0.03). CALU rs339097 A>G is associated with higher warfarin dose requirements, independent of known genetic and nongenetic predictors of warfarin dose in African Americans.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2008

Performance of Commercial Platforms for Rapid Genotyping of Polymorphisms Affecting Warfarin Dose

Cristi R. King; Rhonda Porche-Sorbet; Brian F. Gage; Paul M. Ridker; Yannick Renaud; Michael Phillips; Charles S. Eby

Initiation of warfarin therapy is associated with bleeding owing to its narrow therapeutic window and unpredictable therapeutic dose. Pharmacogenetic-based dosing algorithms can improve accuracy of initial warfarin dosing but require rapid genotyping for cytochrome P-450 2C9 (CYP2C9) *2 and *3 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and a vitamin K epoxide reductase (VKORC1) SNP. We evaluated 4 commercial systems: INFINITI analyzer (AutoGenomics, Carlsbad, CA), Invader assay (Third Wave Technologies, Madison, WI), Tag-It Mutation Detection assay (Luminex Molecular Diagnostics, formerly Tm Bioscience, Toronto, Canada), and Pyrosequencing (Biotage, Uppsala, Sweden). We genotyped 112 DNA samples and resolved any discrepancies with bidirectional sequencing. The INFINITI analyzer was 100% accurate for all SNPs and required 8 hours. Invader and Tag-It were 100% accurate for CYP2C9 SNPs, 99% accurate for VKORC1 -1639/3673 SNP, and required 3 hours and 8 hours, respectively. Pyrosequencing was 99% accurate for CYP2C9 *2, 100% accurate for CYP2C9 *3, and 100% accurate for VKORC1 and required 4 hours. Current commercial platforms provide accurate and rapid genotypes for pharmacogenetic dosing during initiation of warfarin therapy.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2005

Pyrosequencing of clinically relevant polymorphisms.

Sharon Marsh; Cristi R. King; Adam A. Garsa; Howard L. McLeod

The data generated from the Human Genome Project has led to an explosion of technology for low-, medium-, and high-throughput genotyping methods. Pyrosequencing is a genotyping assay based on sequencing by synthesis. Short runs of sequence around each polymorphism are generated, allowing for internal controls for each sample. Pyrosequencing can also be used to identify tri-allelic, indel, and short-repeat polymorphisms, as well as determining allele percentages for methylation or pooled sample assessment. Assays details for Pyrosequencing of clinically relevant polymorphisms are described in this chapter.


Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2010

Ability of VKORC1 and CYP2C9 to predict therapeutic warfarin dose during the initial weeks of therapy

Nicholas Ferder; Charles S. Eby; Elena Deych; Jenine K. Harris; Paul M. Ridker; Paul E. Milligan; Samuel Z. Goldhaber; Cristi R. King; Tusar K. Giri; Howard L. McLeod; Robert J. Glynn; Brian F. Gage

Summary.  Background: CYP2C9 and VKORC1 genotypes predict therapeutic warfarin dose at initiation of therapy; however, the predictive ability of genetic information after a week or longer is unknown. Experts have hypothesized that genotype becomes irrelevant once international normalized ratio (INR) values are available because INR response reflects warfarin sensitivity. Methods: We genotyped the participants in the Prevention of Recurrent Venous Thromboembolism (PREVENT) trial, who had idiopathic venous thromboemboli and began low‐intensity warfarin (therapeutic INR 1.5–2.0) using a standard dosing protocol. To develop pharmacogenetic models, we quantified the effect of genotypes, clinical factors, previous doses and INR on therapeutic warfarin dose in the 223 PREVENT participants who were randomized to warfarin and achieved stable therapeutic INRs. Results: A pharmacogenetic model using data from day 0 (before therapy initiation) explained 54% of the variability in therapeutic dose (R2). The R2 increased to 68% at day 7, 75% at day 14, and 77% at day 21, because of increasing contributions from prior doses and INR response. Although CYP2C9 and VKORC1 genotypes were significant independent predictors of therapeutic dose at each weekly interval, the magnitude of their predictive ability diminished over time: partial R2 of genotype was 43% at day 0, 12% at day 7, 4% at day 14, and 1% at day 21. Conclusion: Over the first weeks of warfarin therapy, INR and prior dose become increasingly predictive of therapeutic dose, and genotype becomes less relevant. However, at day 7, genotype remains clinically relevant, accounting for 12% of therapeutic dose variability.

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Howard L. McLeod

Washington University in St. Louis

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Charles S. Eby

Washington University in St. Louis

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Brian F. Gage

Washington University in St. Louis

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Rhonda Porche-Sorbet

Washington University in St. Louis

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Paul M. Ridker

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Elena Deych

Washington University in St. Louis

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Paul E. Milligan

Washington University in St. Louis

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Petra Lenzini

Washington University in St. Louis

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Gloria R. Grice

St. Louis College of Pharmacy

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