Title of article :
Pharmacogenetics and drug-induced nephrotoxicity in renal transplant recipients
Author/Authors :
Zununi Vahed Sepideh Research Center for Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology - School of Advanced Biomedical Sciences - Tabriz University of Medical Sciences - Tabriz, Iran , Ardalan Mohammadreza Research Center for Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology - School of Advanced Biomedical Sciences - Tabriz University of Medical Sciences - Tabriz, Iran , Samadi Nasser Research Center for Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology - School of Advanced Biomedical Sciences - Tabriz University of Medical Sciences - Tabriz, Iran , Omidi Yadollah Research Center for Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology - Faculty of Pharmacy - Tabriz University of Medical Sciences - Tabriz, Iran
Abstract :
The advent of calcineurin
inhibitors (CNIs), as the leading
immunosuppressive agents, not only has
revolutionized the transplant medicine but also
made it a better therapeutic intervention that
guarantees the graft outcome and improves
the survival rate of patients. However, genetic
polymorphism(s) in the CNIs metabolic
substrates genes (CYP3A4, CYP3A5) and their
transporter such as P-glycoprotein (P-gp) can
influence the CNIs metabolism and elicit some
possible systemic and intra-renal exposures to
drugs and/or metabolites with differential risk of nephrotoxicity, jeopardizing the transplantation.
Methods: In the current study, we review the recent literatures to evaluate the effects of genetic
polymorphisms of the genes involved in development of chronic calcineurin nephrotoxicity and
progression of chronic allograft dysfunction (CAD) providing an extensive overview on their
clinical impacts.
Results: Identifying the inherited genetic basis for the inter-individual differences in terms of
drug responses and determining the risk of calcineurin-mediated nephrotoxicity and CAD allow
optimized personalized administration of these agents whith minimal adverse effects.
Conclusion: Pharmacogenetics characteristics of CYP isoforms (CYP3A) and efflux
transporters (P-gp and MRP), involved in metabolism and extracellular transportation of the
immunosuppressive CNIs, can be of pivotal information in the pharmacotherapy of the renaltransplant
recipients. Such information can be used for the successes clinical interventions to
attain an improved drug administration strategy with reduced rates of rejection and toxicity.
Keywords :
Cytochrome P450 , Pharmacogenetics , Nephrotoxicity , Renal transplantation , Immunosuppressive agents , Calcineurin inhibitors
Journal title :
Bioimpacts