Abstract
AIM: To share the experience of a US national reference laboratory, offering genotyping for TPMT and NUDT15, TPMT enzyme phenotyping and detection of thiopurine metabolites. METHODS: Retrospective review of archived datasets related to thiopurines drug therapy including patients' data that underwent TPMT and NUDT15 genotyping, and smaller data sets where genotyping was performed with TPMT enzyme levels (phenotyping) +/- therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM). RESULTS: Thirteen percent of patients had variants in one or both genes tested. Testing for NUDT15 revealed 3.9% additional patients requiring thiopurines dosing recommendations. A correlation between TPMT enzyme activity and TPMT polymorphisms (odds ratio OD = 71.41, p-value <0.001) and between older age and higher enzyme levels (OD = 0.98, p-value = 0.002) was identified. No correlation between sex and TPMT enzyme levels, nor between TPMT genotyping and the level of thiopurine metabolites was found. CONCLUSION: Adding NUDT15 to TPMT genotyping, identified additional 3.9% patients to benefit from thiopurine dose modifications. A significant correlation between genetic variants in TPMT and TPMT enzyme levels and between age and enzyme levels was established, while no correlation was identified between sex and enzyme levels nor between TPMT variation and thiopurine metabolites. Providers rely more significantly on genotyping only approach, rather than genotyping and phenotyping.