Precision psychiatry in clinical practice.

Journal: International journal of psychiatry in clinical practice
Published Date:

Abstract

The treatment of depression represents a major challenge for healthcare systems and choosing among the many available drugs without objective guidance criteria is an error-prone process. Recently, pharmacogenetic biomarkers entered in prescribing guidelines, giving clinicians the possibility to use this additional tool to guide prescription and improve therapeutic outcomes. This marked an important step towards precision psychiatry, which aim is to integrate biological and environmental information to personalise treatments. Only genetic variants in cytochrome enzymes are endorsed by prescribing guidelines, but in the future polygenic predictors of treatment outcomes may be translated into the clinic. The integration of genetics with other relevant information (e.g., concomitant diseases and treatments, drug plasma levels) could be managed in a standardised way through ad hoc software. The overcoming of the current obstacles (e.g., staff training, genotyping and informatics facilities) can lead to a broad implementation of precision psychiatry and represent a revolution for psychiatric care.Key pointsPrecision psychiatry aims to integrate biological and environmental information to personalise treatments and complement clinical judgementPharmacogenetic biomarkers in cytochrome genes were included in prescribing guidelines and represented an important step towards precision psychiatryTherapeutic drug monitoring is an important and cost-effective tool which should be integrated with genetic testing and clinical evaluation in order to optimise pharmacotherapyOther individual factors relevant to pharmacotherapy response (e.g., individual's symptom profile, concomitant diseases) can be integrated with genetic information through artificial intelligence to provide treatment recommendationsThe creation of pharmacogenetic services within healthcare systems is a challenging and multi-step process, education of health professionals, promotion by institutions and regulatory bodies, economic and ethical barriers are the main issues.

Authors

  • Raffaella Zanardi
    Department of Clinical Neurosciences, IRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Milan, Italy.
  • Dario Prestifilippo
    Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University Vita-Salute San Raffaele, Milan, Italy.
  • Chiara Fabbri
    Department of Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
  • Cristina Colombo
    Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy.
  • Eduard Maron
    Department of Psychiatry, University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia.
  • Alessandro Serretti
    Department of Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.