With fuel pressure dropping, it sounds like you need to upgrade the pump - it's a known issue form many with your state of mods. I've been fortunate that pressure is holding fine -- so far.
But before you order a pump or internals, could you answer a couple questions and check a couple things?
1. How many miles do you have on the car?
2. How many of those miles are on your present set of plugs?
3. What are the heat range of the plugs?
4. When did you last check gap?
5. At what rpm range during WOT does the stuttering happen? By this I mean is it at or near your sifit point, or does this happen earlier in the power band, and if so, where?
6. How much boost are you running on that tune, especially under load, say from 4,000 rpm to 5,000 rpm or so?
A couple things to check, depending on answers above:
1. Pull the plugs and look at them. If they are aftermarket plugs, especially if they are step colder, are they clean or are you getting some fouling? The center elecrode should be clean. You may see a little black soot around the very bottom of the threaded part and maybe the last couple threads. That's o.k., given how pig rich these engines run, especially under load, but the ground electrode itself and the center fine wire electrode should be clean. The insulation below the center electrode wire should be white, clean and have no crack or evidence of heat blisters. The ground strap in the area where the spark jumps to the center electrode should be clean and light gray color.
2. While looking at the plugs check the gap. With your mods, you want the gap to be about .026 to .028 on AP tune.
You may be experiencing something called "spark blow out" in which high boost can actually temporarily blow out the spark when you are under load at WOT, especially once you get into higher gears - third and above. A poor analogy would be like trying to light a cigarette lighter in a strong wind, but you get the idea. This seems to happen when boost is raised 2 psi or more over stock and when the gap opens up on the plugs to .035 or more.
If you have the right plugs, if they are clean and if they are gapped properly, then you might have a bad plug coil or wire causing a misfire. If not, then it sounds like you may be a candidate for a fuel pump upgrade or new upgraded internals.