CYP2D6 ability to metabolize tamoxifen and recurrence

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  • Fallleaves
    Fallleaves Member Posts: 806
    edited March 2014

    Kayb, I didn't see your post before I posted mine. I thought testing for cyp2d6 cost between $350 and $600, which didn't seem like that much compared to the costs of treatment. But looking at Amplichip, which seems to be the most accurate, it looks more like the $600-$1300 range. Still, for something that can have such a big impact on treatment, it seems very much worth it. 

  • Linda-n3
    Linda-n3 Member Posts: 2,439
    edited March 2014

    I don't know how much it costs to measure endorphin levels, but that may be another option for some women who wonder if they are getting the benefit of tamoxifen. If they are slow metabolizers, that means they don't convert tamoxifen to endoxifen (the active form) quickly enough, and so MAY have levels that are too low to be effective. However, after some length of time, that level MIGHT build up, and therefore ultimately clinical effectiveness is not affected. I think back on my own experience with tamoxifen, and I had such horrific SEs that I just could not tolerate the drug, and I also did not know if it was even going to be in the therapeutic range for endoxifen, so rather than test either genetics or endoxifen level, my MO just backed off when I told her life was intolerable on the drug and I needed to get off of it. So I went without anything until recurrence 6 months later. Would knowledge have affected my decisions? Maybe. Maybe not. We will never know, but the point is, I did not even have the basic knowledge from which to make an informed decision.

    Doing large scale studies is actually fairly expensive, takes a lot of time to write the proposals, get them through IRB approval, recruit subjects, randomize them, follow them, etc. It takes a huge amount of manpower (womanpower) hours and money. Money for research is not infinite, so things have to be prioritized. Which would you rather fund, a study on genetics that might affect millions of women with early stage breast cancer that will possibly help prevent recurrence, or do you fund a study to find better, less toxic drugs to treat early stage and late stage cancers, or do you fund a study related to quality of life issues for millions of cancer patients who experience SEs of all the toxic and traumatic treatments?

    Each of us experience breast cancer and its treatment in our own unique way, and so we each have a "soap box" and a "cause", and I think this is the right response, because many others have the same experiences but do not have the energy or opportunity to speak up about their experience. So those of us who have the energy, the knowledge, the resources - we SHOULD speak up for ALL of these causes. My soapbox is that we need to LISTEN to patients with these horrific diseases and horrific treatments, and we need to keep open minds and support research in ALL of these areas. We need to understand that there is not enough $$$ to go around to fund ALL research, and there does need to be some prioritization, but we need to keep reminding our health care providers to keep up with the latest research, and to contribute by reporting outcomes when they can. And when there are tests out there that are available, and that have at least SOME validity and SOME predictive value, then they should be used! This is the way to generate more data!!!! Use the test, report the results, see how close to "truth" the results are, and don't hide those results! OK, off my soapbox for now.

  • Heidihill
    Heidihill Member Posts: 5,476
    edited April 2014

    I am an ultra rapid metabolizer and as a result only taking 10mg of Tamoxifen. I feel so much better now than on the one-size fits all Femara dose. There are other things though that affect Tamoxifen metabolism, including CYP3A gene, smoking, alcohol consumption, grapefruit, certain anti-depressants, and lack of Vitamin D.

    http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/04/130418142328.htm

  • Linda-n3
    Linda-n3 Member Posts: 2,439
    edited April 2014

    Heidi, glad to know you are doing well on the lower dose of tamoxifen! Excellent example of how applying available knowledge in specific individual cases can result in better compliance and hopefully, outcomes!

    I thought I would post this link to Berg Pharma here - they are not focused on specific CYP genes, but they certainly seem to have "the BIG picture" of disease processes, their treatments and toxicities of treatments in mind all at once. There seems to be an underlying message of "inflammation" and "mitochondrial role" in so many of the diseases that we see (cancer, autoimmune, nervous system, diabetes, cardiovascular, etc.) and they certainly have some very high aspirations. It is NOT an academic institution, but has partnered with some of the best academic institutions in the country - just thought you might enjoy perusing the site (especially you, Sas!).

    http://bergpharma.com/index.html


  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    Linda thanks, oh so thank you, ---will delve into it, But in the mood post court for DBF's child support case to delve back into the elements of negligence and malpractice. Partly, cuz I used to teach it to medics. Therefore, have better than a rudimentary understanding, but not a law training understanding.

    It's an exercise in the mind---LOL of what I remember. I do believe at the moment that Heidhils link showed that NIH knew in 2008 and before that tamox's transition through 2d6 was a problem. OR at least approved Mayo's research b/c they showed it was a problem. Ergo, the outcome may be a better drug that doesn't have to use 2d6.  YAY. So, no drug interactions at 2d6. YAY. Again SSRI's and other psychotropics that primarily use 2d6 etc could be given with out fear.

    BUT my soapbox is ALL drugs. Science has at least identified 5 paths. Repeating paths only b/c each repeat, they are further stuck in the brain LOL.  2d6, 2c9, 2c19, 3a4, 3a5. Thousands of drug interactions can be avoided a year. Yes, there are other paths. Over time other paths may be identified as major players. But these paths HAVE been identified as the major players. 

    I think it unconscionable, that there are only 5 and EVERY person isn't routinely tested once in their life. I'll concede at reasonable time of testing. Placed on one permanent drug or drug for cancer. This would avoid Paintball therapy.

    OH Linda----so much fun being on the soapbox LOL. We'Ve talked so much, I know you get my intensity.

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    Thanks, to all that have posted since the pause. Please, continue to post around my soap-boxing. You have all brought the necessary articles here for reading and discussion. Without those articles, members can't make there own conclusions of what they want to pursue. One article may have have no meaning to one person, to the next may be the AH-HAH moment for pursual.

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    Was going to use this box to continue the game of looking at the elements of negligence. Decided it would break the continuity.

  • jessica749
    jessica749 Member Posts: 429
    edited April 2014

    Wow. I'm dizzy reading all this stuff. But interesting, the question. Too bad I don't see my MO for a while. Need to remember to ask about this.

  • gpawelski
    gpawelski Member Posts: 564
    edited April 2014

    I totally agree, there is still much that is unknown. Like I stated before, genomics is far too limited in scope to encompass the vagaries and complexities of human cancer biology, when it comes to drug selection. Efforts to administer these drugs often result in low response rates at significant toxicity and cost. The genetic sequence of a known gene (genotype) does not equate to having the disease state (phenotype) represented by that gene.

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    Greg maybe AHRQ didn't find relevancy. But the article that Heidihill linked re: research on Z-endoxifen is showing promise. If it continues to show promise, and ultimately shows better patient response then that will disprove the conclusion of AHRQ. 

    If that does turn out to be true, it further solidifies why, pathways should be tested

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    I finished "playing" with the elements of negligence. I'm sure a lawyer would be able to tear apart what I've written. That's fine. I simply wanted to see if the elements could be applied. 

    As limited as my legal knowledge is, I do conclude that it is in the physicians best interest not to test for known paths BECAUSE then they WOULD be held accountable for not altering medicine dose or combination.

    In today's medical recommendations re :testing of the CYP paths. The physician can use the defense that any reasonable physician is following recommended guidelines that testing not be done. Therefore, they had not breached their duty to the patient b/c a drug dose amount or interaction was not forseeable. Any damage as a result of treatment can not be causally related. 

    Is that why Paintball therapy is the accepted practice?

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    Is there a lawyer in the house?

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    144 Posts3,401 View

    I looked at the views when I posted my post in Jan. 2014. The counter was 1033. The counter is as above. You are reading . You are interested. You are talking to the patient in the next chair. You are reading articles. You are questioning? Why? Question more? 

    Ask why---"WHY Haven't I been tested to make sure the drug is right for me?".... It will set off a chain of events.

  • carpe_diem
    carpe_diem Member Posts: 1,256
    edited April 2014

    sas-schatzi (and you really are a treasure!),

    I've been reading this strand regularly and have brought up the issue with my mo.  She gave me the expected answer (which I've heard before) that there was no evidence that selecting treatment based on testing had any advantage over best practice.  I've been stable for three years now on anastrozole so this is not a point I want to push on, since this is a new mo for me and she has been generally accommodating and responsive. I do want to keep up with research on this topic so that when I have the inevitable progression I know whether I need to push for testing before a change in treatment plan.

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    Carpe Diem Thank you that was a very sweet thing to wake up too :)

    There are many positives in what you have written. You are reading and questioning. Every time a person brings this up to their docs, the doc will consider the question more. The more questions from patients under their care, the more they will study the question. In studying the question the more they will learn. The more they learn, the more the implications of how drugs work will cause them to consider the total picture of how drugs work either individually or together. Very positive.

    You are stable on Anastrozole for three years. You don't mention s.e.'s . All AI's are metabolized through 3A4. This is a guess, but a reasonable guess is that your 3A4 is normal. My "3's" are not, but this was just tested in Jan 2014. The s.e.s of each AI's were so crippling, I was placed on Fentanyl , Oxycodone, and Savella(SSNRI). In each case after a period of time, I chose to stop each drug. What this means to my future is unknown. Had we known the defects at the 3's. My dose could have been altered. I may have been able to receive the treatment.

    Tamox as a substitutue would likely have been a problem too b/c it is metabolized by 2D6 and 3A4. Plus, the YS program indicates that there is a major interaction between Tamox and Norvasc( a blood pressure med) @3A4. Would this have been identidied. Unknown. The YS program identifies the interaction, but it's not known to me if all drugs checker programs do. Plus, the abnormality of the 3's was only identified in 2011. All drugs then had to, or should have been re-evaluated for how they worked individually, or in combination through the 3's. once the abnormal allele's were discovered.

    Your statement "I do want to keep up with research on this topic so that when I have the inevitable progression I know whether I need to push for testing before a change in treatment plan." Is a very reasoned approach. At present,  no s.e.'s are present, but you are aware that a change may occur in the future. As any cook knows the addition of one item to a recipe can change the outcome of a dishes taste from wonderful to awful. 

    Your statement "that there was no evidence that selecting treatment based on testing had any advantage over best practice." In all of science, what was accepted to be as absolute at one time, was later to be found false. For example, the belief that the sun revolved around the earth, was later disproved. It rocked the thinking of the time. Galileo spent a long portion of the remainder of his life under house arrest for writing of his deductions. But eventually, it became the accepted fact.

    In medicine, it is the same. What was considered "best practice" at one time was later disproved. One question from a patient to her doc re:whether she should taken an aspirin a day is tremendous example of this. The doc realized she really didn't know. The question caused the doc to research the question. What this doc identified was that no aspirin studies included women in the research. She, also, identified that no women were usually in ANY drug research unless it was a drug specifically for women.

    This lead to legislation that required that a certain percentage of women be involved in all new drug research. Women's response to new drugs were required be evaluated separately. What has been learned from this was that women's body respond to chemicals differently than men. Retroactive studies on drugs have been done to determine how we respond to drugs already approved.

    One question during a routine office visit changed the world of research.  :)

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    Saving and splitting post- under construction-----construction complete for now---life is calling :)

    ____________________-

    The CYP450 of the liver system was first identified in 1955, the research has been ungoing and exploding ever since.

    While researching answers for correctness and completeness, every reading I have learned more. Only in the last week or so, I saw the phrase " extrahepatic CYP450" I thought that odd, since I've been reading for many years about the CYP system as it relates to the liver. I do know in all my past learning that each re-look at information allows more to be understood.

    In reading today, I decided to find out where they are located.  The below article from 2000 identifies these sites. "Although a majority of the isozymes are located in the liver, extrahepatic metabolism also occurs in the kidneys, skin, gastrointestinal tract, and lungs. Significant inactivation of some orally administered drugs is due to the extensive first-pass metabolism in the gastrointestinal tract by the CYP3A4 isozyme (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC131224...

    Sheesh, more to worry about and study. If you attempt to read the study, you may drown in 10$ words, I felt like I was LOL.

    While the above quote includes the stated sites of CYP activity, it is not all inclusive, other citations include the brain, mucus membranes of the upper respiratory system(above trachea), adrenal, thyroid, testes, ovarian, pituitary, and cell mitochondria. I'm sure I missed a few. This includes about everything important in the body. Perhaps, the easier answer is every body system and cell. I couldn't find anything re:skeletal system, but I grow weary of searching at the moment when the sky is so blue and the sun is so warm :)

    My focus will continue to be the liver CYP system. I included the above for completeness. The article though does identify how the major players are intergal to everything, and they function a bit different in where they are located. For example, "Significant inactivation of some orally administered drugs is due to the extensive first-pass metabolism in the gastrointestinal tract by the CYP3A4 isozyme". If someone has abnormalities of the "3's"--like me--what does it mean to anything I ingest?

    Question: How does knowing CYP major players metabolic activity, affect treatment choice for those that have metastasis to the brain, lungs, and colon.?

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    As a young nurse in the 70's, I was fascinated by the new knowledge about the cardiovascular system that could be monitored by telemetry. The identification of the beta and alpha receptors. By the time I started to teach medics, beta and alpha turned into beta1/beta2/ alpha 1/ alpha 2-----bought a new book.--4 years.later.

    4 years..... a lesson

    We then went on  to, calcium channel blockers, then the renal blockers. With each new class of drugs, it was so exciting.

    But I learned along the way that problems occurred. I learned that nurses would give drugs b/c they were ordered without considering the consequences. They would give them b/c they were ordered. Docs didn't either. I studied hard to understand the drugs and what drugs could interact. 

    I did this b/c I saw to many situations that the whole drug scenario wasn't being watched.

    That was the 70's and 80's through to relief in 2009-----nothing had changed---------if you believe, your drug interactions are being evaluated call your pharmacist and ask what drug interaction checker has been run?

    Ask your doc how your drugs interact?

    Even before CYP was required to be documented in monographs, drug interactions were known. But those that were lazy didn't pay attention. Use of drugs was required to be understood, but documentation wasn't required

    Drug indicated, drug ordered, drug given.

    An example, Verapamil indicated for fast heart rates. Nurse comes to me and says this patients heart rate is really slow. I asked why the patient admitted---fast heart rate -verapamil appropriate drug---Reviewed sequence of telemetry. Yes, the drug slowed the really fast rate heart rate --now in the 30's Asked if she had given the dose now ordered---no---said you made a good decision, one more dose could have flat-lined the patient.

    The point being drugs work as they are supposed too, the deliverer of the drug has to understand the consequences of delivery. The nurses previous to her indescrimantely gave the drug after the patient came into normal range---b/c it was ordered.  They should have reported it to the doc and a dosage change made.

    That was along ago occurrence. WE are beyond giving drugs as ordered. Nurses have a responsibility to understand dose, relationship, and action. Always have, but accountability was then as now--- know your drugs .

    Why the story, I believe doc's have accountability for how drugs work.

    I believe that accountability should be based on the patients genetics.

    Your genetics can determine outcome. 

    Do you accept Paintball therapy or targeted therapy?

    For some reason I'm alive. No known reason, except I went for a prophy, then BC was found. Of 21 women on paternal side, inclusive of 3 aunts and 19 first cousins, I'm still writing.  9 of 21 had BC. The most recent death was Joanie, March 31st, 2014

  • carpe_diem
    carpe_diem Member Posts: 1,256
    edited April 2014

    SAS,

    That's quite a family history! I don't have much cancer in my family, but then out of nowhere my sister and I have each had three different cancers (kidney, leukemia, and stage 1 bc vs. endometrial, bladder (twice), and stage 4 bc, respectively). This was all in our 50's and 60's so it doesn't fit into the known genetic bc causes, but it was enough to get me tested for P-TEN and Li-Fraumenei abnormalities.  Both were normal, but you have to feel that something's  going on. It seems that we are at the point now that a lot of genetic testing is available, but we haven't caught up yet with translating genotype into phenotype. 

    I agree with you that we need to encourage doctors to use the tools available, especially in drug choice and dose, but there is clearly a lot of basic research that needs to be funded.

    In answer to your earlier comment, my se's have been very mild: a little nausea when I first started anastrozole, and some fatigue that might just be cancer related rather than drug related. I've never had a hot flash, even when I was going through menopause, although I do have occasional cold flashes. The icy feeling is kind of weird, but it doesn't get you all sweaty. I had a bit of pre-existing arthritis when I was diagnosed, but if anything it's gotten better with weight loss and exercise. Except for the anvil hanging over my head, it has been more like having an early stage bc, only without the chemo and hair loss. And our early-stage sisters know the anvil is lurking up there, too, even though they have a much better chance that it will miss.

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    Hi Carpe, Thanks for writing back :)

     Not sure why I threw in the cancer stats in my April 6th post, I was drinking wine, feeling the sadness over most recent cousins losses. 

    That family got hit hard in 4 days. Her son died Friday, before the Sunday that she passed. Over 7 years, he had kidney, colon, liver and prostate cancer. He was her oldest of six children.

    She had BC 2 years ago and mets'd to the liver last fall. Her decision was to let nature take it's course. I then learned of her eldest son's cancer history in that call last fall. That was our last chat. Huge family and the kind that you cannot talk for years , but when you do, it's like yesterday.

    That wing of the family was at the beginning of a bell curve on cousins. Many of them were having children when I was born. I was on the down swing of the curve. Frankly, the contact that we've all had is unusual since the grandparents of all passed prior to 1962.

    I had been intensely thinking of her over multiple days. Decided to call Monday, left a message on the recorder." Hi, blah, blah". Decided to call her sister right after leaving the message. It was 5:30 pm. One of the sisters Dh's, died at 4pm on Monday. Joanie passed the afternoon before. In 4 days three were lost to cancer. Two blood relatives, one not. 

    My call last fall, was to try and get the family on that wing to do a cancer tree. I had done one when I was dx'd in 2009. I received genetic counseling that was through Shands Health Systems in Gainsesville, Florida. It was a grant study program studying BC it was free. The numbers to me were staggering. My intent was to alert the family ---we have a problem. 

    The numbers are getting worse

    The numbers now are 53 blood relatives on the paternal side, with 23 major primary cancers and 3 skin cancers(non melanoma) that I know of. Of the 23 major cancers,  there have been mets which I have not counted, but are numerous. There have been several that have multiple primaries. Joanie's son, I didn't know of his problems. So, it's into the next generation. 

     I can't seem to make a dent in the family regarding surveillance.

    I'm on my second primary--thyroid. But on the day I was dx'd with BC, I was given the diagnosis of a brain tumor. Lost my career same day----bad 4 hours. I had a colonoscopy last summer that dx'd a precancerous polyp. So, follow up scope this summer will be interesting. Had I not been going for a prophy bmx, I would not be writing this, the BC was very aggressive.

    I think I have more than enough info to get genetic testing----I have concluded on research that Chek2, LiFraumenea, Lifrumenea Like Syndrome apply. P-Ten I will have to look into--thanks. There's one more that sounded like it applied---in decluttering, I lost the notes. 

    I've called Genetech and Dr Susan love foundation but don't fit there criteria for testing. I believe we should meet someone's criteria as a cluster. Haven't found anyone interested.  I'm not just worried about me--it's the cousins and their kids, and of course DS.

    I believe the genetic break occurred with paternal grandmother b/c there are lots of cancers on her side. Regarding: Paternal GF, a full second cousin researched geneology back to Ireland as a hobby,  only cardiovascular problems recorded on that side. All Paternal GM's side, were farm families in the early 1900's when pesticides and fertilizers became into use. Indiscriminate amounts and exposure was not known to be a problem. We now know that they were.

    I can't control my genetic break.

    But the defects in the CYP450 system, I can at least try and help control the response of drugs given to me. 

    Hence , the soapbox on CYP known drug metabolism. Let us control what we can, b/c it may influence our response to that which we can't control.

    Again , thanks Carpe Diem, another stretch in the story, yours and mine, may cause someone else to think question to question the same.

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    BTW I keep changing my avatar -------now that I have learned to change it. I will and have been changing to what ever my mood is----it's quite nice. I was feeling unglued earlier in the day. I'm trying to download a Radioactive symbol for April 21st when I receive the "pill" but haven't been successful. There is time between now and then. It really is quite nice to control what the avatar expresses L&H&P"s sassy

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    Called youscript pharmacist and radiation oncogolist today-----to see if defects in 3's were a concern---for Ra 131 scheduled for April 21st...fot Thyroid  ca......neither knew-----they have time to work before the 21st. 

    Cool they have to figure it out before I'me given the drug versus after. Particularily since I pointed out that the defect in 3A4 has extrahepatic, effect in the Gi tract skin and kidney.

    The Youscript person wasn't a Pharmacist, it was an intake person for none medical people that have subscriiptions  

    The RO, did a dr.zeus questionaire. He really was challenged, but was great about saying he would look into it. COOL. He's challenged to review something, not brought up before.

    I can tell he's a doc that will be hitting the books and seeking advice on this one.------cuz he admitted he didn't know-------plus, he acknowledged what I said about the previous taxotere exposure----not that he agreed to all the complications. He listened.

    Listening is better than being blown off.

  • cypher
    cypher Member Posts: 508
    edited April 2014

    Wow, I wish I understood what the heck you all are talking about!  Clearly you have a lot of knowledge ....  Ok I keep asking MO about the CYP2D6 test.  He says, the research isn't sufficiently conclusive and/or the test results are somewhat ambiguous.  Because I am premenopausal, my only other option aside from tamox would be to shut down my ovaries.  He says, it is a very draconian approach for a test he believes is unreliable.

    However, I am very concerned b/c I was nearly 100% er/pr+ so I reaaaaaallly need that tamox to work.  I looked into paying for it out of pocket, but I need a referral, so then I need to see another oncologist and then (if that onc agrees) get a referral for the CYPetc test.  Oy.  Anyway I would appreciate a nontechnical response to MO's statement if you oh so knowledgeable folks could give me one....  (I.e., what are my options anyway?)  thanks!

    btw I had taxotere and carboplatin and my SEs were fairly minimal ....  I don't know if that has any relevance to any of this.

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    cypher---well.. tough question

    Again, I believe all 5 should be tested for, if you've read my posts since Jan. My 2's were normal...I was surprised at that when they came in b/c response to meds , I long ago learned to be very careful--decades..... then when the three's came in in Jan, 2014, it explained most everything.

    I'm opposite of the norm. If you look back and read the stats that Kayb wrote, and is on Youscripts site, abnormal's are perdomaintently in the 2's. My 3's abnormal's fall in a much smaller percentage. Since my 3's are abnormal, it explains a life long sensitivity to drugs. I learned early _--go low.---now it's backed up by science.-----prior to this docs varied on response -------is she being a complainer, sensitive, psychosomatic.-------you put an adjective on it.  Now I have a super legigtimate concern-------the two routes ---pathes---enzymes affecting drug work are abnormal and conflicting.  One intermediate and the other rapid.   DUH-------and 50% OF ALL DRUGS GO THROUGH BOTH. but 3A4 , SEEMS TO BE THE PREDOMINATE. So, my decades listening to my body response and always asking for the lowest dose worked. Except for the cancer drugs. No one one would listen. 

    They had a one size fits all approach----------seriously, messed my body up

    Cypher, reread these few pages. Read where I tried to simpilfy things since Jan post. No genius here. Just study and the ability to raise questions.

    Right now I have my RO confounded re: thyroid cancer therapy----he's clueless about RA 131 metabolism and paths. I pressed him------he didn't know. 

    The bottom line needs to turn from "I Think to I Know".

    BTW ask for the ovaries to be taken out------Not worth the risk. They are just two little plum size white balls that can kill you.. Yeah, there are drugs to suppress them. La poop. If they are out, they are out. 

     Cyper your words." He says, the research isn't sufficiently conclusive and/or the test results are somewhat ambiguous.". No---- genetic testing done once in your life  is absolutely conclusive as to what your genetic metabolism of a drug(s) is--period. His understanding is based on lack of study.  He's taken the easy way out with NCCN guidelines.  We've already had a member show that her doc didn't have a clue about the system and he's involved in establishing national guidelines.

    You've read the above posts--------they are NOT showing any understanding of how the enzyme paths work based on actual testing.

    Let's take a simple approach---what's your blood type? One of a few right? O, A, AB, B. Simple. Why Identify these? Well, you mix the wrong blood types and you die. What is so hard about taking the next step---

    " I want to know what drugs are going to work in my body without causing me harm or killing me?"

    The testing is cheap compared to your life. 

    Contact Genelex and ask for support on how to get your doc to get you tested and insurance to cover it.

    Other labs test, Genelex is the ONLY company in the world that tests and then provides the drug/pharmacy consultation. 

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    Oh, I just thought I had a moment of insight--lol. Same insight. As above post

    Greg- and VR you are consumate researchers, I'm not bad either, but you are functioning from the point of view that they know what they are talking  i.e those that believe Paintball Drug Therapy is an the accepted approach. I'm functioning from the point of view that they don't.know what they are talking about. I moved long ago to the belief that drugs should be targeted as the sharpest arrow. That puts us at extreme ends on this subject which for discussion purposes IS helpful. It makes us analyse and keep studying the subject.

    RO still researching on whether RA1 131 can affect any of the metabolic pathways of mine that are abnormal. I can't find anything either. Doesn't mean there isn't info out there.. Just means we haven't located it. I have learned there is a whole transport mechanism I never knew about. What will happen is the RO, will actually know more about his own use of RAI 131. Because he couldn't identify exactly how RAI131  and iodine were absorbed & metabolized. His knowledge stopped at " It's absorbed. It's elemental." My pressing him to move from "I think, to I know", will make him a better doc. Perhaps, I should send him this link

    http://flipper.diff.org/app/pathways/5686

    Not necessary reading here, but since I receive the drug Monday Apr 21st, I'm more comfortable with knowing, it's a different mechanism of work.

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    KayB so wonderful to hear from you. Yes, I agree with you that the docs are in over their heads on this one. Reliance on NCCN guidelines and ASCO guidelines will go into a tailspin when this kind of info is brought to their attention. 

    Genelex, has all their info being inputed and back up by reference from a company that only does that, and that company is the world leader in it.

    What many docs do now is they carry a Blueberry or plampilot(is that old--LOL). Where they can pull up drugs.

    My PCP and my counselor that I introduced to Genelex in 2010, each can bring up their patients with drugs and genetics listed. They each can check with the patient sitting right there. No Paintball Drug Therapy. It's based on my genetics and inputed drug data that is continually being updated. 

    My counselor last evening told me more and more of the docs that he deals with are having their patients tested. He says they are not just doing for the patients benefit. They are doing it for legal reasons too. They see that giving drugs without the benefit of the genetics will be a legal problem for them. Lots of discussion going on. :) My little area of the world is on the move with it. YAY.

    I've said that I believe what we are discussing here will be the norm in 5 years. My counselor believes it will happen sooner.

    I'm teaching my DS the lawyer how to use it. Shall I indicate the reason, or is it self explanatory.

    A pebble tossed into a pond sends out a ripple. How far and wide, we do not know. :) sassy

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    KayB hope your grant is progressing well, AND that you are having fun doing it :) sassy

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    Kayb Oh  what fun with the learning with your grant program. Such a great topic too.

    It's not my fear for liability for docs regarding testing and appropriate drug management. It's going to be the "driver" that will get it done. It will advance them more rapidly from Paintball Drug Therapy to targeted, non-injuring therapy. Over 40 years, what I have learned is too many docs and nurses didn't keep up with their learning, or go beyond the minimum.  I was considered to be a --go to person--on drug questions. Yes, I was. But that didn't happen without lot's of study. Drugs scared the bejessus out of me b/c they can kill if not done right. The stories of errors, I could tell b/c someone didn't adequately know what they were prescribing or giving. 

    One example, a drug now pulled from the market, used to treat hypermotility (rapid movement) of the GI tract. My first contact with the patient after report (change of shift) that the patient had an ileus (Gi motility stopped) a couple of days. I look at drug list and went - no chit sherlock---drug continued to be given-- no wonder. Doc was at fault for not discontinuing drug, but his reaction was "They are still continuing it. "Er, yes, shall I discontinue it". Polite. The point being. Know your drugs, know why they are being given, know when to alter dose based on response, know when to stop.

    Now we are onto the next generation and beyond..........Yay

  • cypher
    cypher Member Posts: 508
    edited April 2014

    Hi SAS, I tried rereading the posts but really couldn't follow them, sorry.  I have an appointment with MO on Thursday so I wish I had a better understanding of this so I could argue with him more successfully.  It concerns me b/c I am 100% er/pr+.  I'm also confused -- what kind of genetic testing is this?  My tumor is long gone so that can't be tested.  In terms of the ooph, there are a lot of negative impacts to having your ovaries removed and frankly there is no way I would consider doing that unless I had mets and that was the recommended course of action.  Odds are on my side that I won't have a recurrence anyway so why give myself a mess of new health problems to prevent a disease I might never get (or get a 2nd time)?  I think that's a very paintball approach! 

    Thanks for the info about genelex -- I'll check out their website.

  • sas-schatzi
    sas-schatzi Member Posts: 19,603
    edited April 2014

    Cypher, so sorry you couldn't follow the posts. I did seriously try to make them user friendly. Did you start at the January 2014 posts. The first 2 pages were written prior to that and those of us that posted in that time had an understanding of the system. 

    The discussion has evolved to CYP450 (CYTOCHROME P450 )system in the liver inclusive of 2D6, 2C9, 2C19, 3A4, 3A5. It is done by a cheek swab. 

    This is NOT a test on a tumor.

    After I found out my 3's were abnormal in Jan 2014, it became my mission to get the word out of the importance of knowing the status of the 5 major known drug metabolism enzymes pathways in the liver. These enzyme pathways show how drugs are metabolized by the liver so that they can do their work in the body. 

    There are many many more pathways in the liver, but at present these are the 5 major ones that have been identified. In the future, other pathways may be identified that will be determined to be a major players. When that time comes, I recommend that people be tested for them as they are identified as to their importance.

    There are some pathways that are only involved with one chemical i.e. VKROC1 path defects from normal, indicate how the dose of coumadin/warfarin a blood thinner is handled in the body. So, even though it is involved with only one drug --it's important. 1:15 hospital admissions in the USA are related to complications to coumadin /warfarin therapy. This is big. There are other mechanisms for testing for coumadin/warfarin, but this is the most accurate.

    Jelson (thank you Jelson) started the thread, her specific interest at the time was 2D6. The thread has evolved as threads do to included other information.

    Sorry, about the off handed comment on the oophs. I don't usually do that. It's a totally different long discussion in and of itself. I am very opinionated and long winded  about the subject, but the statement was inappropriate to the discussion here. Actually, the definition of Paintball Drug Therapy would not apply to the oophs at all. Definitely, discussion of oopherectomy and  paintball approach, shouldn't be used together. But as I said it doesn't belong here.

    I do hope you re-read the section starting from January 2014 to present. Cypher, it's NOT an easy subject. It's not light material. It does take study. It's work. It's allot of memorization. There are researchers that spend their entire careers learning and studying the system. You are not unusual to not get it the first time through, but each time of reading about the system more may "gell". 

    I've been reading about it for 20 years or more and there isn't a single time of reading that my brain has picked up something I may have read before, that now in a new reading can be layered into the older material that I understand.

    I hope you enjoy Genelex  and their YouScript division. When I want to understand how a drug works it's my "go to" site. My other "go to" site for drugs is dailymed.nlm. It's produced by the government, but it's works LOL. The difference between the two is Genelex /YouScript is based on my genetics. Therefore, all the responses are very specific to me. Dailymed.nlm's section on metabolism is generic meaning that it's identifying a enzyme path and can't be applied to me specifically at all. So, worlds apart. 

  • cypher
    cypher Member Posts: 508
    edited April 2014

    I tried rereading it but am still lost.  I will look into that genelex thing, and I might get a second opinion out of network on the tamox etc.  In fact, I had my estradiol etc. tested after I finished chemo and it looked based on that that I was in chemopause.  Someone else had the same levels and her dr put her on AIs.  Is there a metabolizing issue with those as well?  Maybe I should have him check my hormone levels again. 

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