Association of genetic variation in pharmacodynamic factors with methadone dose required for effective treatment of opioid addiction

Author:

Levran Orna1,Peles Einat2,Randesi Matthew3,Shu Xu4,Ott Jurg56,Shen Pei-Hong7,Adelson Miriam2,Kreek Mary Jeanne3

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of the Biology of Addictive Diseases, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, USA. .

2. Dr Miriam & Sheldon G Adelson Clinic for Drug Abuse Treatment & Research, Elias Sourasky Medical Center, Tel Aviv, Israel

3. Laboratory of the Biology of Addictive Diseases, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, USA

4. Department of Biostatistics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

5. Institute of Psychology CAS, Beijing, China

6. Laboratory of Statistical Genetics, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, USA

7. Laboratory of Neurogenetics, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse & Alcoholism, Bethesda, MD, USA

Abstract

Aim: The interindividual variability in the dose required for effective methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) for opioid addiction may be influenced in part by genetic variations in genes encoding pharmacodynamic factors of methadone. This study was conducted to identify some of these variants. Materials & methods: This study focused on 11 genes encoding components of the opioidergic (OPRM1, POMC and ARRB2), the dopaminergic (ANKK1 and DRD2) and the glutamatergic pathways (GRIN1 and GRIN2A), as well as the neurotrophin system (NGFB, BDNF, NTRK1 and NTRK2). The study includes 227 Israeli patients undergoing stable MMT. Results: Out of the 110 variants analyzed, 12 SNPs (in BDNF, NTRK2, OPRM1, DRD2 and ANKK1) were associated with methadone dose (nominal p < 0.05). Of these SNPs, ANKK1 rs7118900 and DRD2 rs2283265 are known to affect gene expression. Logistic regression of five representative SNPs discriminated between individuals requiring a methadone dose of >120 mg/day and <120 mg/day (p = 0.019), and showed moderate sensitivity and specificity (AUC of 0.63 in receiver operating characteristic analysis). Conclusion: This data should stimulate further research on the potential influence and clinical significance of these variants on MMT. Original submitted 14 November 2012; Revision submitted 12 March 2013

Publisher

Future Medicine Ltd

Subject

Pharmacology,Genetics,Molecular Medicine

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