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Abstract

The Use of Next-Generation Sequencing in Pharmacogenomics by Dietmar Enko, Simon Michaelis, Christopher Schneider, Erich Schaflinger, Andreas Baranyi, Wolfgang J. Schnedl, Daniel J. Muller

Background: Next-generation sequencing (NGS) methods have become more commonly performed in clinical and research laboratories.
Methods: This review summarizes the current laboratory NGS-based diagnostic approaches in pharmacogenomics including targeted multi-gene panel sequencing, whole-exome sequencing (WES), and whole-genome sequencing (WGS).
Results: Clinical laboratories perform multiple non-uniform types of pharmacogenetic panels, which can reduce the overall number of single-gene tests to be more cost-efficient. Compared to the targeted multi-gene panels, which are not typically designed to detect novel variants, WES and WGS have a greater potential to identify secondary pharmacogenomic findings, which might be predictive for the pharmacotherapy outcome of different patient settings. WGS overcomes the limitations of WES enabling a more accurate exome-sequencing at appropriate coverage and the sequencing of non-coding regions. Different NGS-based study designs with different test strategies and study populations, varying sample sizes, and distinct analytical and interpretation procedures lead to different identification results of pharmacogenomic variants.
Conclusions: The rapid progress in gene sequencing technologies will overcome the clinical and laboratory challenges of WES and WGS. Further high throughput NGS-based pharmacogenomics studies in different populations and patient settings are necessary to expand knowledge about rare functional variants and to enhance translation in clinical practice.

DOI: 10.7754/Clin.Lab.2023.230103