Pharmacogenomics — Drug Disposition, Drug Targets, and Side Effects
William E. EvansSt. Jude Children's Research Hospital and the University of Tennessee Colleges of Pharmacy and Medicine, Memphis 38101-0318, USA. [email protected]Howard L. McLeodWashington University Medical School, St. Louis
2003en
ABI
Аннотация
It is well recognized that different patients respond in different ways to the same medication. These differences are often greater among members of a population than they are within the same person at different times (or between monozygotic twins).1 The existence of large population differences with small intrapatient variability is consistent with inheritance as a determinant of drug response; it is estimated that genetics can account for 20 to 95 percent of variability in drug disposition and effects.2 Although many nongenetic factors influence the effects of medications, including age, organ function, concomitant therapy, drug interactions, and the nature of the . . .
Перевод пока недоступен
Идентификаторы
Цитирования и источники
Цитирований: 3Использованных источников: 0