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Department of  Psychiatry & Health Behavior

Personalized Treatment
for Mental Illness

A genetic test can help avoid medication failures and side effects

According with the Overview of Drug Safety in the US on
June 8, 2005 by National Academies Institute of Medicine:

4There are 100,000 fatalities each year from adverse drug

    reactions and a huge number of hospitalizations

4Cost of drug side effects reaches billions

4Current drug therapy is fundamentally a trial and error

    process


FDA's critical path initiative in drug safety includes:

  • Use of  genomic or other tools to identify those at high risk for side effects
     

  • Use of genomic or other tools to identify the subgroups with high probability of  positive drug response (targeted therapy)

In a study of patients who discontinued treatment with a common antipsychotic in a state hospital, 9% were genetically tested as poor metabolizers of the drug, 38% were taking medications which inhibit the drug metabolism and the rest of 53% had side effects due to unknown reasons.

de Leon J et al, 2006, Mol Diag Ther in press

Psychiatrists can use a FDA approved genetic test to identify individual differences in response to medications for depression, schizophrenia and other mental illnesses.

MCG psychiatrists and laboratory scientists offer this cutting edge FDA approved technology for genetic testing.  This simple blood test can help detect how people metabolize drugs commonly prescribed by psychiatrists: http://www.mcg.edu/news/2006NewsRel/Peiper010606.html

How can this help in my own treatment?

  • Knowing the way people metabolize drugs will help physicians chose the right dose and the right medication for each patient (personalized  prescription)

Any physician can order this genetic test

The article by Tom Corwin, "Patients' gene tests help tailor treatment," is available to registered* users on the Augusta Chronicle website:
http://chronicle.augusta.com/stories/070406/met_87700.shtml

* If you are not a registered user, you can register for a free Augusta Chronicle user account.


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Psychology Residency Program | Psychiatry and Health Behavior
 
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Please email comments, suggestions or questions to:
bmaddox@mcg.edu

February 1, 2008