Abstract

With increasing patient interest in and access to pharmacogenomic testing, clinicians practicing in primary care are more likely than ever to encounter a patient seeking or presenting with pharmacogenomic test results. Gene-based prescribing recommendations are available to healthcare providers through Food and Drug Administration-approved drug labeling and Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium guidelines. Given the lifelong utility of pharmacogenomic test results to optimize pharmacotherapy for commonly prescribed medications, appropriate documentation of these results in a patient’s electronic health record (EHR) is essential. The current “gold standard” for pharmacogenomics implementation includes entering pharmacogenomic test results into EHRs as discrete results with associated clinical decision support (CDS) alerts that will fire at the point of prescribing, similar to drug allergy alerts. However, such infrastructure is limited to the few institutions that have invested in the resources and personnel to develop and maintain it. For the majority of clinicians who do not practice at an institution with a dedicated clinical pharmacogenomics team and integrated pharmacogenomics CDS in the EHR, this report provides practical tips for documenting pharmacogenomic test results in the problem list and allergy field to maximize the visibility and utility of results over time, especially when such results could prevent the occurrence of serious adverse drug reactions or predict therapeutic failure.

Highlights

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations

  • Drug selection and dosing recommendations based on pharmacogenomic data are available through U.S Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved labeling and the Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium (CPIC) guidelines (Table 1) [12,13]

  • Given the lifelong utility of pharmacogenomic test results to optimize pharmacotherapy for medications commonly prescribed in a primary care practice and across specialty areas, documenting pharmacogenomic test results in a patient’s electronic health record (EHR) is essential for continued use over time [15]

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Large academic medical centers that have implemented system-wide pharmacogenomics clinical services integrate pharmacogenomic test results into EHRs in a discrete manner with accompanying clinical decision support (CDS) alerts for results that warrant a change from normal prescribing.

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