Abstract

ObjectiveWarfarin is the most commonly prescribed oral anticoagulant, although having a narrow therapeutic index and wide interindividual variability. The aim of this study was to replicate the utility of VKORC1 (−1639G>A) rs9923231 genotyping in predicting the mean daily dose and to evaluate its ability to categorize warfarin-treated patients to high-, intermediate-, or low-dose categories in the South Indian population. Materials and methodsA cohort of 222 warfarin-treated patients was genotyped using restriction fragment length polymorphism method. The influence of the rs9923231 polymorphism on the variations in the mean daily dose was compared using one-way analysis of variance and linear regression analysis. Discriminatory ability of the rs9923231 polymorphism to group the patients into ordered dose categories was assessed by estimating the proportional odds ratios using the ordered logit regression analysis. ResultsThe frequency of AA genotype and A allele in the study sample was found to be 1.8% and 9.23%, respectively, which was similar to reports from other South Indian populations. The mean daily dose required to achieve the optimum international normalized ratio was significantly lower in AA homozygous genotype carriers (3.99 ± 1.67 mg/day) and GA heterozygous (4.26 ± 1.57 mg/day) compared to the GG genotype carriers (5.51 ± 2.13 mg/day), p = 0.003. The A allele carriers (GA+AA genotypes) had a 3.23 higher odds of being grouped as a low-dose requiring category compared to non-carriers (95% CI 1.49–6.98, p = 0.003). ConclusionsThese preliminary results strongly support the use of VKORC1 (−1639G>A) rs9923231 polymorphism for genetically guided initial warfarin dosing in South Indian patients with heart valve replacements.

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