Abstract 150P
Background
The DPYD gene encodes the enzyme dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD), crucial for metabolizing chemotherapeutic agents like capecitabine, 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), and tegafur. Variants in DPYD can lead to increased chemotherapy toxicity. Despite routine DPYD testing, data on variant prevalence across different tumours, ethnic groups, and the impact of social deprivation on testing access are limited.
Methods
We collected data from 1478 patients referred to Nottingham University Hospitals (01 Dec 2021-31 Dec 2023) for 5-FU, capecitabine, or tegafur chemotherapy, including demographics, ethnicity, tumour type, and DPYD test results. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS (v28.0). We integrated DPYD test results with the Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) data, recorded per Lower Super Output Area (LSOA), to analyze testing rates by social deprivation through choropleth mapping and statistical variance testing.
Results
Mean age was 62.69 years (46.7% male, 53.3% female). Overall DPYD variant prevalence was 7.0%. Variability was noted across tumour types: 7.9% in colorectal, 6.2% in breast, 7.2% in hepato-pancreatico-biliary, and 5.8% in upper gastrointestinal cancers. Other tumour types showed 3.9%. DPYD variant rates by ethnicity were 5.0% in Afro-Caribbean, 6.7% in Asian, and 7.4% in Caucasian patients. Ethnicity was unknown in 182 patients with a 5.5% variant rate. The most common variant was c.1129-5923C>G (HapB3) (75.7%), followed by c.1905+1G>A (DPYD2A) (13.6%) and c.2846A>T (D949V) (8.7%). Homozygous c.1129-5923C>G (HapB3) and c.1679T>G (DPYD*13) were each observed in 1.0%. Social deprivation analysis showed no significant differences in DPYD testing rates between the most and least deprived LSOAs (Mann-Whitney test p-value=0.74).
Conclusions
DPYD variants are present in 7% of patients eligible for 5-FU, capecitabine, or tegafur chemotherapy in our cohort. Caucasian and colorectal cancer patients have the highest variant rates. No variation in DPYD testing was observed based on social deprivation.
Editorial acknowledgement
Clinical trial identification
Legal entity responsible for the study
S. Madhusudan.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
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