Community Academic Profiles

Sean P. David, M.D., D.Phil.

Publication Details

  • Dopamine D4 receptor gene variation moderates the efficacy of bupropion for smoking cessation.

    Leventhal AM, David SP, Brightman M, Strong D, McGeary JE, Brown RA, Lloyd-Richardson EE, Munafò M, Uhl GR, Niaura R. Pharmacogenomics J. 2012; 12 (1): 86-92

    Smokers (≥10 cigarettes per day, N=331) of European ancestry taking part in a double-blind placebo-controlled randomized trial of 12 weeks of treatment with bupropion along with counseling for smoking cessation were genotyped for a variable number of tandem repeats polymorphism in exon III of the dopamine D4 receptor gene. Generalized estimating equations predicting point-prevalence abstinence at end of treatment and 2, 6 and 12 months after the end of treatment indicated that bupropion (vs placebo) predicted increased odds of abstinence. The main effect of Genotype was not significant. A Genotype × Treatment interaction (P=0.005) showed that bupropion predicted increased odds of abstinence in long-allele carriers (odds ratios (OR)=1.31, P<0.0001), whereas bupropion was not associated with abstinence among short-allele homozygotes (OR=1.06, P=0.23). The Genotype × Treatment interaction remained when controlling for demographic and clinical covariates (P=0.01) and in analyses predicting continuous abstinence (P's≤0.054). Bupropion may be more efficacious for smokers who carry the long allele, which is relevant to personalized pharmacogenetic treatment approaches.

    PubMedID: 20661272

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