Pharmacogenomic testing and prescribing patterns for patients with cancer in a large national precision medicine cohort

Population databases could help patients with cancer and providers better understand current pharmacogenomic prescribing and testing practices. This retrospective observational study analysed patients with cancer, drugs with pharmacogenomic evidence and related genetic testing in the National Institutes of Health All of Us database. Most patients with cancer (19 633 (88.3%) vs 2590 (11.7%)) received ≥1 drug and 36 (0.2%) received genetic testing, with a significant association between receiving ≥1 drug and age group (p<0.001), but not sex (p=0.612), race (p=0.232) or ethnicity (p=0.971). Drugs with pharmacogenomic evidence—but not genetic testing—were common for patients with cancer, reflecting key gaps preventing precision medicine from becoming standard of care.
Source: Journal of Medical Genetics - Category: Genetics & Stem Cells Authors: Tags: Therapeutics Source Type: research