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Title: Blood gene expression profiling of an early acetaminophen response.

Authors: Bushel, P R; Fannin, R D; Gerrish, K; Watkins, P B; Paules, R S

Published In Pharmacogenomics J, (2017 Jun)

Abstract: Acetaminophen can adversely affect the liver especially when overdosed. We used whole blood as a surrogate to identify genes as potential early indicators of an acetaminophen-induced response. In a clinical study, healthy human subjects were dosed daily with 4 g of either acetaminophen or placebo pills for 7 days and evaluated over the course of 14 days. Alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels for responders to acetaminophen increased between days 4 and 9 after dosing, and 12 genes were detected with expression profiles significantly altered within 24 h. The early responsive genes separated the subjects by class and dose period. In addition, the genes clustered patients who overdosed on acetaminophen apart from controls and also predicted the exposure classifications with 100% accuracy. The responsive genes serve as early indicators of an acetaminophen exposure, and their gene expression profiles can potentially be evaluated as molecular indicators for further consideration.

PubMed ID: 26927286 Exiting the NIEHS site

MeSH Terms: No MeSH terms associated with this publication

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