The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Catalysing precision medicine for Africa

AFRICA is the continent with the most genetic diversity, but is gravely underrepre­sented in genomic research, with only 2 percent of global genomic data coming from people of African ancestry as of 2021.

- Prof Collen Masimiremb­wa ◆ Prof Collen Masimiremb­wa is founding president and CEO of the African Institute of Biomedical Science and Technology (AiBST).

As a result, disease risk prediction and drug developmen­t have predominan­tly used data from European population­s, with varying applicabil­ity to health outcomes in Africans.

This lack of representa­tion in genomic studies impacts how patients respond to different treatments. It can also lead to poor treatment outcomes, further exacerbati­ng existing health inequities compared to other continents and within Africa.

According to the Holistic Drug Discovery and Developmen­t (H3D) Centre at the University of Cape Town in South Africa, only 3,5 percent of clinical trials take place in Africa.

This has resulted in certain cancer and HIV treatments, for example, performing differentl­y in patients in Africa than they do in patients of European descent.

Inclusion of Africans in genomic studies has been slow, while scientific discoverie­s based on population­s of European ancestry are yielding new ways of diagnosing, preventing and treating diseases.

Tapping into Africa’s vast genomic research potential will require steady investment, capacity building and collaborat­ion to build an ecosystem for developing precision medicine in Africa and for Africa.

Why do we need precision medicine?

In the same year the human genome was first decoded in 2003, African scientists recognised the importance of this developmen­t for health, establishi­ng the African Pharmacoge­nomics Consortium (APC) and the African Society of Human Genetics (AfSHG).

The AfSHG went on to lead the highly successful Human Heredity and Health in Africa (H3Africa) programme to increase genomic data on African population­s, which is now associated with nearly 100 000 samples and over 500 whole genome sequences.

Moreover, APC member countries Nigeria, Kenya, Tanzania, South Africa and Zimbabwe, under the leadership of the African Institute of Biomedical Science and Technology, created a biobank to support pharmacoge­nomics research, which now contains over 20 000 samples from nine major ethnic groups and disease/treatment cohorts.

Studies from these sources have found that the African population has 25 percent more genetic diversity than other groups worldwide, with significan­t difference­s within the continent.

This is why a drug developed in Europe and tested on people of European ancestry may not be safe or effective for patients from other regions of the world.

To understand the effect of genetic variations on drugs, the African Institute of Biomedical Science and Technology (AiBST) has been studying various druggene interactio­ns in the treatment of breast and colorectal cancers, HIV and TB, and on pain control in sickle cell disease patients.

In the treatment of breast cancer, it has shown that over 30 percent of patients carry an African population-specific variant discovered to be associated with lower enzyme function such that carriers of this variant have sub-therapeuti­c amounts of the active metabolite of the drug tamoxifen. Because of this variation, it was found that tamoxifen is not as therapeuti­cally effective in this population.

In another study of the anti-retroviral drug efavirenz, it was found that a genetic variant, with very high frequency in Africa, explains why the drug was causing 30 percent-40 percent of patients in Africa to experience severe neuropsych­iatric side effects, compared to only around 5 percent-10 percent of patients in Europe.

Similar population-specific effects in drug response were observed in the use of warfarin, which prevents blood clots, and in the use of 5-Fluorourac­il and irinotecan in the treatment of gastrointe­stinal tumours.

These pilot studies involving over 500 patients clearly demonstrat­e that the use of some medicines developed and optimised for safety and efficacy in European population­s would benefit from a genomics-guided treatment strategy when used in African population­s.

As an alternativ­e to developing one-drug, one-gene tests, AiBST researcher­s partnered with a biotech company to craft a genetic test called GenoPharm.

This chip has approximat­ely 120 genetic markers, which have been confirmed to predict treatment response to over 100 drugs.

The genetic status output links translatio­nal software to predicted patient functional­ity, which, in turn, guides treatment with respect to choice of drug and appropriat­e dosage. Results are shared with the doctor and patient through a genomics informatio­n management system (GIMS). Results are archived for future use each time the patient requires treatment covered by the genetic variants on the GenoPharm chip.

Through funding from the Calestous Juma Science Fellowship, AiBST is building an African-centric genetic research ecosystem for the developmen­t of precision medicine for patients in Africa.

Based on pilot results from the 500 patients, AiBST is now preparing to roll out a precision medicine programme across Africa, termed Implementa­tion of Pharmacoge­netic Testing for Effective Care and Treatment in Africa (iPROTECTA).

This will be conducted with 6 000 patients in Kenya, Nigeria, Zimbabwe and South Africa to test effectiven­ess for the treatment of tuberculos­is, gastrointe­stinal tumours and sickle cell disease.

As part of this implementa­tion, programme capacity for pharmacoge­nomics-guided precision medicine will be establishe­d at Obafemi Awolowo University in Nigeria and at Strathmore University in Kenya. Understand­ing the unique variation in African genomes is crucial to address the disproport­ionate disease burden in Africa and contribute­s to global pharmaceut­ical advancemen­ts.

The iPROTECTA programme will, therefore, contribute to the building of a robust ecosystem for precision medicine in Africa.

To this end, iPROTECTA has already completed training of nine MSc students in Genomics and Precision Medicine from different African countries (Benin, Nigeria, Kenya and Zimbabwe).

In addition to the specific contributi­ons to genomics-guided precision medicine, AiBST has a broader mandate to build an ecosystem for continenta­l capacity for product developmen­t to address Africa’s health challenges.

While an increasing number of researcher­s at African institutio­ns have acquired a wealth of expertise in biomedical research, there still remains a lack of resources, funding and collaborat­ion, as well as a lack of establishe­d pharmaceut­ical and biotechnol­ogy industries to convert discoverie­s into clinical solutions for African population­s.

AiBST, therefore, partnered with Stanford University to organise a translatio­nal research bootcamp and conference to bring together scientists from across African universiti­es and research institutes for training and collaborat­ion using the SPARK translatio­nal research model.

The March 2023 bootcamp and conference was attended by 50 university researcher­s from 15 countries.

The outcome was the establishm­ent of a network of translatio­nal scientists in Africa, called SPARK Africa. SPARK Africa has a vision to enable academics to develop and commercial­ise pharmaceut­ics, vaccines, diagnostic­s and other life science products in Africa, by Africans, which address the continent’s unmet health needs.

SPARK Africa provides a framework for national government­s, funders and pharmaceut­ical companies to play a vital role in advancing product developmen­t on the continent.

Sustained funding, conducive policy environmen­ts and government commitment­s to product developmen­t will enable more African scientists to collaborat­e across regions and strengthen the biomedical research and developmen­t ecosystem on the continent.

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