Lecture 9 - drug development and discovery 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Key stages of drug development

A
  1. basic research and target selection
  2. pre-clinical research
  3. clinical research (phase 1,2 and 3)
  4. regulatory review
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2
Q

what is the target selection for drugs?

A

includes receptors, enzymes and transport proteins

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3
Q

what is lead finding?

A
  • finding the lead compounds of the drugs by cloning target protein in human form
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4
Q

what is primary screening?

A

used to prepare sets of homologues by combinational chemistry to identify structural features for selective binding to the target

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5
Q

Exploratory safety measures (lead selection)

A
  • predicting safety concerns by selecting a candidate
  • this helps in the next steps towards study designs
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6
Q

Regulatory safety measures (preclinical and clinical)

A
  • provides a safety margin
  • defines dose to start human trials and the max dose
  • obtain regulatory approval of clinical
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7
Q

What is LD50

A

experiment conducted in mice to determine the dose of a chemical that causes 50% death rate called median lethal dose.

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8
Q

common rodent study

A

rat because it is easier to manipulate and has greater blood volumes

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9
Q

common non-rodent study

A

beagle because it has consistent quality of health and low background pathologies

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10
Q

what are the three dose groups for toxicology study?

A
  1. low (no toxicology)
  2. intermediate
  3. high (toxicology expected in target organ)
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11
Q

clinical pathology

A
  • haematology/ clinical chemistry
  • kidney and liver function
  • coagulation
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12
Q

what is histopathology?

A
  • studying structural manifestation of disease under a microscope where these results are one of the most important parts on non-clinical safety measurements.
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13
Q

what is pathology?

A
  • large organ toxicity
  • determining which organs are affected
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14
Q

goal of preliminary toxicology?

A

tests eliminates genotoxicity and determines the non-toxic dose of the drug.

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15
Q

goal of pharmacokinetic testing?

A

includes studies of absorption, metabolism, distribution and elimination in lab animals

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16
Q

what does chemical and pharmaceutical development assess?

A

feasibility of large-scale synthesis and purification. assess stability of the compound under various conditions to develop a formula suitable for clinical studies

17
Q

what happens in the phase 1 clinical trial?

A
  • tests if the drug is safe to humans and checks for any potential problems in physiological systems.
  • sees if drug produces any unpleasant symptoms and pharmacokinetic properties
  • conducted on small group of healthy volunteers
18
Q

what are the smaller groups within a clinical trial called?

A

cohorts
- first cohort given a small dose of the drug and dose adjusted for other groups

19
Q

where is phase 1 clinical trial conducted?

A

done in labs to investigate if the drug is hitting its target or changing at the level of a protein.
looks into how the drug will interact with other drugs or food

20
Q

what happens in phase 2?

A
  • tested on 100-300 patients to test the efficacy in clinical situation and then establish a dose used for phase 3
  • these studies cover several distinct clinical disorders to identify possible therapeutic indications for new compound.
21
Q

what happens in part 2 (part a)?

A
  • exploratory study that has clinical efficacy
  • tests pharmacodynamics or biological activity
  • explores dose range
  • conducted on patients or healthy volunteers
22
Q

what happens in phase 2 (part b)

A
  • more definite dose range study in patients
  • efficacy as the main focus
  • used as pivotal trials for drugs treating life-long illnesses
23
Q

what happens in phase 3?

A
  • double-blind and randomised trial
  • performed on thousands of patients to compare the new drug with an alternative.
  • these are very expensive to organise
24
Q

what happens in phase 3 (part a)?

A
  • designed and executed to get statistically significant evidence of efficacy and safety as required by world organisations.
  • includes post marketing study commitments
  • presents data to the regulatory agencies to decide if drug is approved.
25
Q

what happens in part 3 (part b)

A
  • study prior to approval with intended support of publications rather than registration
26
Q

what happens in phase 4?

A
  • obligatory post marketing surveillance to detect any rare or long-term side effects from using drug in clinical environment for thousands of patients
  • could limit use of drug in certain groups
27
Q

withdrawing drugs

A
  • to do with risks of patients or commercial reasons
  • risks or harms is the main reason with unexpected side effects that were not detected