 |
Nguyen
TV, Eisman JA.
Pharmacogenomics of osteoporosis: opportunities and challenges.
J Musculoskelet Neuronal Interact. 2006 Jan-Mar; 6(1):62-72.
The genetics of osteoporosis can be considered in two broad
areas: disease susceptibility and drug activity. While the former has
been studied, the latter is still largely untouched. Pharmacogenomics
is the utilization of genetic information to predict outcome of drug treatment,
with respect to both beneficial and adverse effects. The pharmacotherapy
of osteoporosis is characterized by variability in therapeutic response
with limited prediction of response on a patient-by-patient basis. This
is particularly problematic in a clinical situation where therapy is typically
required for several years before outcomes can be evaluated for an individual.
Thus, the emerging field of pharmacogenomics holds great potential for
refining and optimising pharmacological treatment of osteoporosis.
Key components for future development of the pharmacogenomics of osteoporosis
should include improved understanding of mechanisms of drug action, identification
of candidate genes and their variants and expansion of clinical trials
to include genetic profiling.
This approach could provide clinicians and scientists with powerful tools
to dissect novel molecular pathways involved in osteoporosis and to identify
new drug targets.
The iterative combination of innovative genomics with classical endocrinological
approaches in osteoporosis research can be examined as a model of biological
research and innovate therapeutical approaches in a continuing interaction
between clinical science and basic research
Tiến Sĩ Nguyễn Văn Tuấn và Ðồng Nghiệp
(YDNN: Tồn Trữ Tài Liệu Y Dược Khoa Của Người Việt)
>>>back>>>
|
 |