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Annals of Internal Medicine | 2011

Assessment of thiopurine S-methyltransferase activity in patients prescribed thiopurines: a systematic review.

Ronald A. Booth; Mohammed T. Ansari; Evelin Loit; Andrea C. Tricco; Laura Weeks; Steve Doucette; Becky Skidmore; Margaret Sears; Richmond Sy; Jacob Karsh

BACKGROUND The evidence for testing thiopurine S-methyltransferase (TPMT) enzymatic activity or genotype before starting therapy with thiopurine-based drugs is unclear. PURPOSE To examine the sensitivity and specificity of TPMT genotyping for TPMT enzymatic activity, reducing harm from thiopurine by pretesting, and the association of thiopurine toxicity with TPMT status in adults and children with chronic inflammatory diseases. DATA SOURCES MEDLINE, EMBASE, the Cochrane Library, and Ovid HealthSTAR (from inception to December 2010) and BIOSIS and Genetics Abstracts (to May 2009). STUDY SELECTION Two reviewers screened records and identified relevant studies in English. DATA EXTRACTION Data on patient characteristics, outcomes, and risk for bias were extracted by one reviewer and independently identified by another. DATA SYNTHESIS 54 observational studies and 1 randomized, controlled trial were included. Insufficient evidence addressed the effectiveness of pretesting. Genotyping sensitivity to identify patients with low and intermediate TPMT enzymatic activity ranged from 70.33% to 86.15% (lower-bound 95% CI, 54.52% to 70.88%; upper-bound CI, 78.50% to 96.33%). Sparse data precluded estimation of genotype sensitivity to identify patients with low to absent enzymatic activity. Genotyping specificity approached 100%. Compared with noncarriers, heterozygous and homozygous genotypes were both associated with leukopenia (odds ratios, 4.29 [CI, 2.67 to 6.89] and 20.84 [CI, 3.42 to 126.89], respectively). Compared with intermediate or normal activity, low TPMT enzymatic activity was significantly associated with myelotoxicity and leukopenia. LIMITATION Available evidence was not rigorous and was underpowered to detect a difference in outcomes. CONCLUSION Insufficient evidence addresses the effectiveness of TPMT pretesting in patients with chronic inflammatory diseases. Estimates of the sensitivity of genotyping are imprecise. Evidence confirms the known associations of leukopenia or myelotoxicity with reduced TPMT activity or variant genotype. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.


Clinical Biochemistry | 2011

Pre-analytic and analytic sources of variations in thiopurine methyltransferase activity measurement in patients prescribed thiopurine-based drugs: A systematic review☆

Evelin Loit; Andrea C. Tricco; Sophia Tsouros; Margaret Sears; Mohammed T Ansari; Ronald A. Booth

OBJECTIVES Low thiopurine S-methyltransferase (TPMT) enzyme activity is associated with increased thiopurine drug toxicity, particularly myelotoxicity. Pre-analytic and analytic variables for TPMT genotype and phenotype (enzyme activity) testing were reviewed. DESIGN AND METHODS A systematic literature review was performed, and diagnostic laboratories were surveyed. RESULTS Thirty-five studies reported relevant data for pre-analytic variables (patient age, gender, race, hematocrit, co-morbidity, co-administered drugs and specimen stability) and thirty-three for analytic variables (accuracy, reproducibility). TPMT is stable in blood when stored for up to 7 days at room temperature, and 3 months at -30°C. Pre-analytic patient variables do not affect TPMT activity. Fifteen drugs studied to date exerted no clinically significant effects in vivo. Enzymatic assay is the preferred technique. Radiochemical and HPLC techniques had intra- and inter-assay coefficients of variation (CVs) below 10%. CONCLUSION TPMT is a stable enzyme, and its assay is not affected by age, gender, race or co-morbidity.


Systematic Reviews | 2012

Interactions of commonly used dietary supplements with cardiovascular drugs: a systematic review

Salmaan Kanji; Dugald Seely; Fatemeh Yazdi; Jennifer Tetzlaff; Kavita Singh; Alexander Tsertsvadze; Andrea C. Tricco; Margaret Sears; Teik Chye Ooi; Michele Turek; Becky Skidmore; Mohammed T Ansari

BackgroundThe objective of this systematic review was to examine the benefits, harms and pharmacokinetic interactions arising from the co-administration of commonly used dietary supplements with cardiovascular drugs. Many patients on cardiovascular drugs take dietary supplements for presumed benefits and may be at risk for adverse supplement-drug interactions.MethodsThe Allied and Complementary Medicine Database, the Cochrane Library, EMBASE, International Bibliographic Information on Dietary Supplements and MEDLINE were searched from the inception of the review to October 2011. Grey literature was also reviewed.Two reviewers independently screened records to identify studies comparing a supplement plus cardiovascular drug(s) with the drug(s) alone. Reviewers extracted data using standardized forms, assessed the study risk of bias, graded the strength of evidence and reported applicability.ResultsEvidence was obtained from 65 randomized clinical trials, 2 controlled clinical trials and 1 observational study. With only a few small studies available per supplement, evidence was insufficient for all predefined gradable clinical efficacy and harms outcomes, such as mortality and serious adverse events. One long-term pragmatic trial showed no benefit from co-administering vitamin E with aspirin on a composite cardiovascular outcome. Evidence for most intermediate outcomes was insufficient or of low strength, suggesting no effect. Incremental benefits were noted for triglyceridemia with omega-3 fatty acid added to statins; and there was an improvement in levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol with garlic supplementation when people also consumed nitratesConclusionsEvidence of low-strength indicates benefits of omega-3 fatty acids (plus statin, or calcium channel blockers and antiplatelets) and garlic (plus nitrates or warfarin) on triglycerides and HDL-C, respectively. Safety concerns, however, persist.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 2009

Systematic review: comparative effectiveness and harms of combination therapy and monotherapy for dyslipidemia.

Mukul Sharma; Mohammed T. Ansari; Ahmed M Abou-setta; Karla Soares-Weiser; Teik Chye Ooi; Margaret Sears; Fatemeh Yazdi; Alexander Tsertsvadze; David Moher


Evidence report/technology assessment | 2010

Assessment of Thiopurine Methyltransferase Activity in Patients Prescribed Azathioprine or Other Thiopurine-Based Drugs

Ronald A. Booth; Mohammed T. Ansari; Andrea C. Tricco; Evelin Loit; Laura Weeks; Steve Doucette; Becky Skidmore; Jeffrey S. Hoch; Sophia Tsouros; Margaret Sears; Richmond Sy; Jacob Karsh; Suja Mani; James Galipeau; Alexander Yurkiewich; Raymond Daniel; Alexander Tsertsvadze; Fatemeh Yazdi


Archive | 2012

Dietary Supplements in Adults Taking Cardiovascular Drugs

Dugald Seely; Salmaan Kanji; Fatemeh Yazdi; Jennifer Tetzlaff; Kavita Singh; Alexander Tsertsvadze; Margaret Sears; Andrea C. Tricco; Teik Chye Ooi; Michele Turek; Sophia Tsouros; Becky Skidmore; Raymond Daniel; Mohammed T Ansari


Archive | 2012

Data Extraction Forms

Dugald Seely; Salmaan Kanji; Fatemeh Yazdi; Jennifer Tetzlaff; Kavita Singh; Alexander Tsertsvadze; Margaret Sears; Andrea C. Tricco; Teik Chye Ooi; Michele Turek; Sophia Tsouros; Becky Skidmore; Raymond Daniel; Mohammed T Ansari


Archive | 2012

Table 27, Summary and strength of evidence for cardiovascular drugs with or without G. biloba—Intermediate outcomes

Dugald Seely; Salmaan Kanji; Fatemeh Yazdi; Jennifer Tetzlaff; Kavita Singh; Alexander Tsertsvadze; Margaret Sears; Andrea C. Tricco; Teik Chye Ooi; Michele Turek; Sophia Tsouros; Becky Skidmore; Raymond Daniel; Mohammed T Ansari


Archive | 2012

Figure 19, Forest plot of serious adverse events with statins, with or without omega-3 fatty acids

Dugald Seely; Salmaan Kanji; Fatemeh Yazdi; Jennifer Tetzlaff; Kavita Singh; Alexander Tsertsvadze; Margaret Sears; Andrea C. Tricco; Teik Chye Ooi; Michele Turek; Sophia Tsouros; Becky Skidmore; Raymond Daniel; Mohammed T Ansari


Archive | 2010

Data extraction and related forms

Ronald A Booth; Mohammed T Ansari; Andrea C. Tricco; Evelin Loit; Laura Weeks; Steve Doucette; Becky Skidmore; Jeffrey S. Hoch; Sophia Tsouros; Margaret Sears; Richmond Sy; Jacob Karsh; Suja Mani; James Galipeau; Alexander Yurkiewich; Raymond Daniel; Alexander Tsertsvadze; Fatemeh Yazdi

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Mohammed T Ansari

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

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Becky Skidmore

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

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Sophia Tsouros

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

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Raymond Daniel

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

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Fatemeh Yazdi

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

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Laura Weeks

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

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