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abstract
Invited review
The Journal of Pathology
"Targeted
therapies provide clinical benefit and improved therapeutic index. They
have a growing prominence in patient management and focus in drug
development. Their development is fuelled by our deepening knowledge of
complex disease phenotypes and the need for improvement in new
therapeutic efficacy. Extrapolation of the biological discovery through
to new therapy targeting the causal biological variants to drive
clinical gain is challenging. Here, we review the impact of germline
mutations on targeted therapies. Historically, germline changes have
contributed most to our understanding of disease mechanisms, and drug
metabolism and exposure, the latter of which has enabled safer
positioning of therapies, such as clopidogrel and irinotecan. Similarly,
pre-screening for germline variants can avoid potentially fatal
hypersensitivity reactions with abacavir. However, germline mutations
continue to emerge as a central player in targeting therapeutics;
ivacaftor drives partial restoration of mucus secretion in cystic
fibrosis patients harbouring specific mutations and treatment with
olaparib exploits germline mutations in BRCA genes to drive synthetic
lethality as an anti-cancer mechanism. Central is definition of the
causal link, association or contribution to the biological variance –
and that we believe it is drugable for therapeutic gain. The demand for
better therapies to treat modern diseases provides the appetite for
continued investigation of the biologic variance associated with
germline mutation, inevitably leading to increased impact on development
of targeted therapeutics."
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