Steroid-induced ocular hypertension/glaucoma: Focus on pharmacogenomics and implications for precision medicine.
Fini M Elizabeth, Schwartz Stephen G, Gao Xiaoyi, Jeong Shinwu, Patel Nitin, Itakura Tatsuo, Price Marianne O, Price Francis W, Varma Rohit, Stamer W Daniel
AI Summary
This study explored genetic factors in steroid-induced glaucoma, identifying novel genes (GPR158, HCG22). This advances precision medicine, potentially allowing genetic screening to predict steroid response and guide treatment.
Abstract
Elevation of intraocular pressure (IOP) due to therapeutic use of glucocorticoids is called steroid-induced ocular hypertension (SIOH); this can lead to steroid-induced glaucoma (SIG). Glucocorticoids initiate signaling cascades ultimately affecting expression of hundreds of genes; this provides the potential for a highly personalized pharmacological response. Studies attempting to define genetic risk factors were undertaken early in the history of glucocorticoid use, however scientific tools available at that time were limited and progress stalled. In contrast, significant advances were made over the ensuing years in defining disease pathophysiology. As the genomics age emerged, it appeared the time was right to renew investigation into genetics. Pharmacogenomics is an unbiased discovery approach, not requiring an underlying hypothesis, and provides a way to pinpoint clinically significant genes and pathways that could not have been discovered any other way. Results of the first genome-wide association study to identify polymorphisms associated with SIOH, and follow-up on two novel genes linked to the disorder, GPR158 and HCG22, is discussed in the second half of the article. However, knowledge of genetic variants determining response to steroids in the eye also has value in its own right as a predictive and diagnostic tool. This article concludes with a discussion of how the Precision Medicine Initiative ® , announced by U.S. President Obama in his 2015 State of the Union address, is beginning to touch the practice of ophthalmology. It is argued that SIOH/SIG may provide one of the next opportunities for effective application of precision medicine.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts6
The first genome-wide association study identified polymorphisms associated with steroid-induced ocular hypertension (SIOH), with follow-up on two novel genes, GPR158 and HCG22, linked to the disorder.
Elevation of intraocular pressure (IOP) due to therapeutic use of glucocorticoids is called steroid-induced ocular hypertension (SIOH).
Steroid-induced ocular hypertension (SIOH) can lead to steroid-induced glaucoma (SIG).
Pharmacogenomics is an unbiased discovery approach that does not require an underlying hypothesis and can identify clinically significant genes and pathways related to steroid-induced ocular hypertension/glaucoma.
Knowledge of genetic variants determining response to steroids in the eye has value as a predictive and diagnostic tool for steroid-induced ocular hypertension/glaucoma.
Steroid-induced ocular hypertension/glaucoma (SIOH/SIG) may provide one of the next opportunities for effective application of precision medicine in ophthalmology, as discussed in the context of the Precision Medicine Initiative®.
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