Background: There have been no published reports comparing the CYP450 GeneChip ® microarray assay with more standard methods of genetic testing. Methods: We collected 20-mL blood samples from 236 volunteers for DNA isolation and testing before each individual ingested 60 mg of dextromethorphan, and collected their urine. CYP2D6 alleles *3 to *7, *9, *17, and *41, and multiple CYP2D6 gene copies were tested by allele-specific PCR (AS-PCR), whereas alleles *2 to *4 and *6 to *11 were tested by the Affymetrix CYP450 GeneChip assay. Five of the CYP2D6 alleles (*3, *4, *6, *7, and *9) were tested by both AS-PCR and the CYP450 GeneChip assay in an independent and blinded fashion in 232 of the 236 healthy volunteers. The combined CYP2D6 genotype from both methods was used to divide the population into four subgroups, poor metabolizers (PMs), intermediate metabolizers (IMs), extensive metabolizers (EMs), and ultrarapid metabolizers (UMs), based on their relative function and ability to express the CYP2D6 gene. The urinary elimination of dextromethorphan was assessed in each of these CYP2D6 subgroups.
This study, limited by a small number of subjects, suggests that one-fifth of Caucasians admitted to a state hospital in Kentucky had genotypes associated with extremes in CYP2D6 activity that may have affected their response to CYP2D6 medications.
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