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Poor CYP2D6 and Ultrarapid CYP2C19 Metabolizer: Clinical Challenge in Psychiatric Treatment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

E. Dlugauskas
Affiliation:
Vilnius University, Clinic of Psychiatry, Center of Neurology, Departament of Psychiatry, Departament of Psychiatry, Vilnius, Lithuania
A. Lengvenyte
Affiliation:
Vilnius University, Faculty of Medicine, Clinic of Psychiatry, Vilnius, Lithuania
R. Strumila
Affiliation:
Vilnius University, Faculty of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Vilnius, Lithuania
A. Utkus
Affiliation:
Vilnius University, Department of Human and Medical Genetics, Center for Medical Genetics, Vilnius, Lithuania

Abstract

Introduction

Finding the right medication in psychiatry can be very demanding both for the doctor and for the patient. It becomes extremely grueling when the patient has a rare type of metabolizing enzymes, and many drugs may be ineffective or cause side effects.

Objectives

To highlight the therapeutic difficulties in psychiatric treatment of the patient with complex genetic cytochrome P450 system alterations.

Aims

To provide an example on a complicated treatment course of the patient that is poor CYP2D6 and ultrarapid CYP2C19 metabolizer.

Methods

Literature review in scientific database–Pubmed–and case report presentation.

Results

We report a case of a woman in her early twenties who was repeatedly referred for psychiatric treatment. A diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia was established, but all treatment rounds were unsuccessful, the illness kept progressing, and major depressive disorder aggravated the clinical picture. The patient became suicidal and injured herself. During the sixth hospitalization in one year the CYP2D6, CYP2C19 and CYP2C9 genotyping was done. CYP2C19 ultrarapid (*1/*17) and CYP2D6 poor metabolizer (*4/*5) profile was discovered. Drugs, that should have been avoided due to the patient's genetic profile, had been prescribed throughout five hospitalizations in a row.

Conclusions

As ultrarapid CYP2C19 metabolizers compose around 3–4% and poor CYP2D6–6–10% of Caucasians, this case presents a rare genetic variant that only 0.18–0.4% of Caucasian population may have. These cases can be extremely clinically challenging and affect healthcare outcomes and costs. Further studies that would include clinical effectivity, drug concentration and genetic testing results are needed.

Type
e-Poster walk: Genetics & molecular neurobiology and neuroscience in psychiatry
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

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