Abstract

Background:Warfarin, anticoagulant is used for thromboembolic disorders. Inter-individual variation in clinical response to warfarin is due to various factors, including polymorphism of Vitamin K epoxide reductase complex 1 (VKORC1)-1639G>A. The aim of our study was to evaluate the effect of VKORC1 polymorphism on the maintenance dose of warfarin.Materials and Methods:Cross-sectional study conducted by the departments of Pharmacology, Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics on patients attending cardiology clinic, receiving warfarin for at least 2 months. Genomic deoxyribonucleic acid was extracted and genotyping was done by Polymerase Chain Reaction - Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism. The correlation between VKORC1 gene polymorphism and warfarin maintenance dose was analyzed.Results:A total of 102 patients with a mean age of 47.72 ± 10.31 years, of which 58 (56.86%) were male. The frequency of VKORC1 G>A for GG, GA, and AA genotypes was 74.51%, 19.61%, and 5.88%, respectively. Variant allele AA was less frequent than the wild type. Mean weekly warfarin dose was 23.12 ± 8.08, 22.93 ± 8.21, and 15.6 ± 5.35 mg in patients with GG, GA, and AA genotypes, respectively. Patients with GG genotype required therapeutic dose compared to variant type (P = 0.001). Multiple stepwise regression model showed 26.3% variability in warfarin dose was due to VKORC1 genotype (R = 0.513, R2 = 0.263, adjusted R2 = 0.256, P = 0.0001).Conclusion:VKORC1 polymorphism alone influence 26.3% variability in warfarin dose and AA genotype patients required lower dose.

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