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[Report]

How Drugs Are Developed: 3rd Edition

Published: 2007/09

Contact 24 hrs/day
Description

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION

CHAPTER 1 DRUG TARGETS AND TARGET HUNTING

  • 1.1 Target hunting
    • 1.1.1 Proteins as drug targets
    • 1.1.2 Enzymes and the significance of protein folding
    • 1.1.3 Protein synthesis
    • 1.1.4 Further processing of proteins
  • 1.2 The range of drug targets
    • 1.2.1 Bioinformatics
    • 1.2.2 Systems biology
    • 1.2.3 Metabonomics
  • 1.3 The range of drugs
    • 1.3.1 Enzyme inhibition
    • 1.3.2 7-transmembrane receptors (7TMs)

CHAPTER 2 LEAD GENERATION

  • 2.1 Introduction
  • 2.2 Small molecule lead generation
    • 2.2.1 Units
    • 2.2.2 Lead generation strategies
    • 2.2.3 Lipinski' s rule of 5
    • . . . molecular size
    • . . . fatty/aqueous considerations
    • . . . hydrogen bonding
    • 2.2.4 Fragment-based lead generation
    • 2.2.5 Chemi-informatic filters
  • 2.3 Practical lead generation
    • 2.3.1 High throughput screening (HTS)
    • 2.3.2 Receptor binding assays
  • 2.4 Combinatorial chemistry
  • 2.5 Parallel synthesis
  • 2.6 Structure/activity relationships (SARs)
  • 2.7 SAR, quantified structure/activity relationships and CADD
  • 2.8 Secondary screening
  • 2.9 Biotechnology and lead generation
    • 2.9.1 Mimicry of the natural ligand
    • 2.9.2 Recombinant technology
    • 2.9.3 Recombinant Factor VIII
    • 2.9.4 Recombinant erythropoietin
    • 2.9.5 Monoclonal antibodies
    • 2.9.6 Monoclonal antibodies and immunogenicity
    • 2.9.7 Mechanism of action
    • 2.9.8 Advantages and disadvantages of biological products versus small molecules

CHAPTER 3 LEAD OPTIMISATION

  • 3.1 Early safety screening
    • 3.1.1 Genetic toxicity
    • 3.1.2 e-screens for genetic toxicity
    • 3.1.3 General toxicity screening
    • 3.1.4 Screening for genetic toxicity - the Ames test
    • 3.1.5 Mouse lymphoma assay (MLA)
    • 3.1.6 Clastogenicity
  • 3.2 HTS bioavailability and pharmacokinetics
    • 3.2.1 Models of absorption
    • 3.2.2 Metabolism
    • 3.2.3 Optimisation of biologicals
  • 3.3 Summary

CHAPTER 4 PREPARING FOR DEVELOPMENT

  • 4.1 Patent filing
    • 4.1.1 Competitor surveillance
  • 4.2 Optimisation for potency
  • 4.3 In vivo activity
  • 4.4 Therapeutic ratio and a consistent drug delivery
  • 4.5 Efficacy, toxicity and dose consistency - the basis of preclinical research
  • 4.6 In search of dosing consistency
    • 4.6.1 The significance of low bioavailability
    • 4.6.2 Optimisation of bioavailability
    • . . . aqueous solubility
    • . . . particle crystallinity and size
    • . . . polymorphism
    • 4.6.3 Stability
    • 4.6.4 Salt formation
    • 4.6.5 Solution stability
  • 4.7 Drug disposition and bioavailability
    • 4.7.1 Absorption and distribution
      • 4.7.1.1 Metabolism and excretion
      • . . . a metabolite may be more active than the parent
      • . . . enzyme inhibition, induction and polymorphism
      • . . . Phase-1 and Phase-2 metabolism
  • 4.8 Pharmacokinetics (primer)
    • 4.8.1 Cassette dosing
    • 4.8.2 Absolute bioavailability
  • 4.9 Drug safety
    • 4.9.1 Toxicogenomics
    • 4.9.2 Safety pharmacology
      • 4.9.2.1 Receptor and enzyme screening
      • 4.9.2.2 Cardiovascular toxicity
      • . . . HERG assay
      • . . . in vivo cardiovascular screening
      • 4.9.2.3 Respiratory system
      • 4.9.2.4 Central nervous system (CNS) screening
  • 4.10 Good laboratory practice
  • 4.11 Summary statements
  • 4.12 Project progression criteria
    • 4.12.1 Target proposal
    • 4.12.2 Nomination of a lead
    • 4.12.3 Nomination of a development candidate
      • 4.12.3.1 Biology
      • 4.12.3.2 Patent
      • 4.12.3.3 Chemistry
      • 4.12.3.4 Pharmaceutics
      • 4.12.3.5 Drug disposition
      • 4.12.3.6 Safety
  • 4.13 Preparing a biological candidate for development
    • 4.13.1 API preparation
    • 4.13.2 Biological drug quality and cell banking
    • 4.13.3 Bioreactors
    • 4.13.4 Clinical formulation
    • 4.13.5 Biologic progression criteria
  • 4.14 The case for development

CHAPTER 5 PRECLINICAL RESEARCH

  • 5.1 Introduction
  • 5.2 Drug substance supplies (kilogram-scale chemistry and bioprocessors)
    • 5.2.1 Patents
    • 5.2.2 Environment
    • 5.2.3 Health and safety
    • 5.2.4 Raw material sourcing and pricing
    • 5.2.5 Scalability
    • 5.2.6 Optimisation
    • 5.2.7 Liaison with the pharmaceutical department
  • 5.3 Good manufacturing practice (GMP)
  • 5.4 Synthetic route optimisation
    • 5.4.1 The early synthetic route for fluoxetine
    • 5.4.2 The final (or manufacturing) route for fluoxetine
    • 5.4.3 Analytical sciences and impurities
    • 5.4.3.1 The importance of finalising the route to drug substance early
    • 5.4.4 Manufacture of biological drugs
    • 5.4.5 API specification
    • 5.4.6 Stability
  • 5.5 Investigational medicinal product (IMP) development
    • 5.5.1 The oral dosage form
    • . . . direct compression
    • . . . dry granulation
    • . . . wet granulation
    • . . . tablet coating
    • 5.5.2 Intravenous dosage form
    • 5.5.3 Specifications and stability
  • 5.6 Non-clinical safety assessment
    • 5.6.1 General toxicology
    • 5.6.2 The regulatory requirements for FIM
    • . . . toxicokinetics
    • . . . safety study outcomes
    • . . . late-stage safety development programme
    • 5.6.3 Reproductive toxicology
    • . . . embryo-foetal development (EFD) testing (segment II)
    • . . . fertility testing (segment I)
    • . . . peri and postnatal toxicity trials (segment III)
    • 5.6.4 Special considerations for biologicals
    • . . . pharmacokinetics
    • . . . immunotoxicity
    • 5.6.5 Genetic toxicity and carcinogenicity
    • . . . the Ames test for regulatory submission
    • . . . chromosomal aberration test
    • . . . in vivo clastogenicity testing
    • . . . carcinogenicity testing
    • 5.6.6 High-risk medicinal products
  • 5.7 Drug disposition
    • 5.7.1 Pharmacokinetics
    • . . . bioavailability
    • . . . distribution
    • . . . elimination and clearance
    • . . . therapeutic window
    • . . . PK/PD modelling
    • 5.7.2 ADME
    • . . . multi-resistance drug protein (MDR)
    • . . . blood-brain barrier
    • . . . plasma protein binding
    • . . . distribution
    • . . . mass balance study
    • . . . tissue distribution studies
    • . . . bile elimination studies
    • . . . drug disposition as the linchpin of drug development

CHAPTER 6 TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH

  • 6.1 Introduction
    • 6.1.1 Proof of concept studies
    • 6.1.2 Biomarkers
    • 6.1.3 Translational research in oncology
    • 6.1.4 Translational research and safety
      • 6.1.4.1 The heart and the liver
      • 6.1.4.2 Translational research and metabolism

CHAPTER 7 PROJECT MANAGEMENT

  • 7.1 Introduction
    • 7.1.1 The project team
    • 7.1.2 The kick-off meeting
    • 7.1.3 The project plan
    • 7.1.4 Maintaining progress
  • 7.2 The project team as the company experts
  • 7.3 Project teams as mediators of innovation
  • 7.4 Project teams and outsourcing
  • 7.5 Project managers

CHAPTER 8 REGULATORY SUBMISSIONS

  • 8.1 Introduction - the regulatory bodies
    • 8.1.1 The International Conference on Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Registration of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use (ICH)
    • 8.1.2 The major regulatory bodies of the world
    • . . . European Agency for the Evaluation of Medicinal Products (EMEA)
    • . . . US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
    • . . . the Japanese Ministry for Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW)
  • 8.2 Regulatory submissions
    • 8.2.1 Application to conduct a clinical trial
    • . . . clinical trial application in the US (IND)
    • . . . and Europe (CTA)
    • 8.2.2 Changes to the European system for application to conduct clinical trials
    • 8.2.4 The investigator' s brochure (IB)
  • 8.3 Regulatory strategy
    • 8.3.1 Quality
    • 8.3.2 Preclinical safety
    • 8.3.3 Linking it all together
  • 8.4 Application to market a new drug
    • 8.4.1 The European licensing system
    • . . . the centralised procedure
    • . . . the mutual recognition procedure
    • . . . national submissions
    • 8.4.2 The common technical document
    • 8.4.3 Electronic CTD submissions (e-CTD)
    • 8.4.4 Marketing applications in the US
    • 8.4.5 Special examples of drug approval processes
    • . . . accelerated approval
    • . . . orphan drug status

CHAPTER 9 CLINICAL EVALUATION

  • 9.1 Introduction
  • 9.2 Definitions
  • 9.3 Clinical trial regulation
    • 9.3.1 Ethics committee approval
    • 9.3.2 The clinical team
    • 9.3.3 Required documentation
  • 9.4 The categories of clinical trials
    • 9.4.1 Characteristics of Phase I trials
    • . . . ADME parameters
    • . . . blood biochemistry
    • . . . dose escalation, single and multiple dose studies
    • 9.4.2 Clinical pharmacokinetics
    • . . . Phase I PK monitoring
    • . . . human microdosing
    • . . . PK trials for specific purposes
    • . . . the elderly
    • . . . paediatrics
    • . . . interaction with food
    • . . . bioequivalence trials
    • . . . specific population groups
  • 9.5 Phase II studies
  • 9.6 Phase II/III Go/NoGo
  • . . . reasons for a project NoGo before Phase III
  • 9.7 Phase III
    • 9.7.1 Characteristics of Phase III trials
    • 9.7.2 Example - rimonabant in Phase III
  • 9.8 Pharmacoeconomics
    • 9.8.1 Trials with pharmacoeconomic endpoints
    • 9.8.2 Assessing technological advances
    • 9.8.3 The basis of NICE analyses
  • 9.9 Concluding summary

CHAPTER 10 POSTMARKETING SURVEILLANCE (PMS)

  • 10.1 Introduction
  • 10.2 The need for PMS
  • 10.3 Pharmacovigilance
    • 10.3.1 Drug safety
    • 10.3.2 Risk/benefit assessment
    • . . . evaluating risk
    • . . . evaluating benefit
  • 10.4 The mechanics of pharmacovigilance
    • 10.4.1 PSURs
    • 10.4.2 Expedited reports
  • 10.5 Risk management
  • 10.6 Pharmacovigilance specification
    • 10.6.1 Developmental data
    • 10.6.2 Class effects
    • 10.6.3 Drug interactions
    • 10.6.4 Less obvious contingencies
  • 10.7 The risk management plan
    • 10.7.1 Risk management in Europe
    • 10.7.2 The withdrawal of Vioxx
    • 10.7.3 Rimonabant

LIST OF TABLES

  • Table 2.1 Units of molarity in decreasing concentration
  • Table 2.2 Example of structure/activity table for hypothetical molecule
  • Table 5.1 Example of specification for final API

LIST OF FIGURES

  • Figure 1.1 Amino acid structure illustrating amino group and carboxylic acid by which peptide bonds and chains of amino acids are formed
  • Figure 1.2 A sequence of amino acids linked through peptide bonds to form a peptide (a mini protein)
  • Figure 1.3 The structure of myoglobin, a muscle protein rich in secondary folding characterised as a-helices
  • Figure 1.4 Tertiary folding of protein chains in an imaginary enzyme
  • Figure 1.5 The main steps of protein synthesis
  • Figure 1.6 The essential elements of DNA
  • Figure 1.7 Base pairing, the triplet code and protein synthesis
  • Figure 1.8 Simplified illustration of the consequences of insulin receptor activation
  • Figure 1.9 Principles of Serenex' s chemical genomics capability
  • Figure 1.10 Illustration of cholesterol synthesis and control by HMGCoAR
  • Figure 1.11 Nervous control of heart rate
  • Figure 1.12 The generic cell and its drug targets
  • Figure 2.1 Structural similarity between serotonin and sumatriptan
  • Figure 2.2 The structures of cholesterol and lovastatin
  • Figure 2.3 Computer model of ligand - protein interaction
  • Figure 2.4 Charge change on amino acid with rising pH
  • Figure 2.5 Illustration of hydrogen bond formation between water molecules
  • Figure 2.6 Schematic of a sample receptor binding assay
  • Figure 2.7 Illustration of 96-well microtitre plates, variants of which are used for combinatorial synthesis
  • Figure 2.8 Combinatorial synthesis of hypothetical peptides
  • Figure 2.9 The basic components of solid-phase combinatorial chemistry
  • Figure 2.10 Representation of first stages of a solid-phase combinatorial synthetic plate
  • Figure 2.11 Simplified network of intracellular enzyme activation
  • Figure 2.12 Hypothetical proteins and their active sites
  • Figure 2.13 Illustration of generation and joining of cohesive ends of two sequences to produce a new sequence
  • Figure 2.14 Structure of an antibody
  • Figure 2.15 Mechanism of action of Herceptin
  • Figure 3.1 Safety studies likely to be included in lead generation and optimisation
  • Figure 3.2 Possible outcomes from the Ames test
  • Figure 3.3 Illustration of the barriers to drug absorption and distribution
  • Figure 3.4 Intestinal cells grown to confluence to form a barrier between upper and lower chambers of culture wells
  • Figure 3.5 Illustrative copy of various published datasets showing the correlation between human absorption and Papp for a series of known drugs
  • Figure 4.1 The Eternal Triangle ................................................... efficacy, safety and dose delivery
  • Figure 4.2 Schematic of the metabolism of a hypothetical drug
  • Figure 4.3 Illustration of the entero-hepatic shunt and drug recycling
  • Figure 4.4 Pharmacokinetic trace of hypothetical orally administered drug
  • Figure 4.5 Pharmacokinetic trace of orally administered drug set against its in vitro potency
  • Figure 4.6 Comparative pharmacokinetic curves for three development candidates
  • Figure 4.7 Pharmacokinetic traces obtained for a drug following oral and iv dosing
  • Figure 4.8 Relationship between Kr channel inhibition and terfenadine concentration
  • Figure 5.1 The CDP as a stimulus and guide for preclinical development
  • Figure 5.2 Simplified project plan around the time of candidate selection through to first in man (FIM) trials
  • Figure 5.3 Early synthetic route for fluoxetine (Prozac)
  • Figure 5.4 Final stage of synthesis of fluoxetine in manufacturing route
  • Figure 5.5 The stages of pharmaceutical discovery and development
  • Figure 5.6 Image of an infusion bag prepared for intravenous administration
  • Figure 5.7 Schematic to show timing of major drug safety studies
  • Figure 5.8 Illustration of a typical 28 day drug safety protocol
  • Figure 5.9 Example of toxicokinetic data constructed from blood samples taken on Days 1 and 28 of a multiple dose safety study
  • Figure 5.10 Comparison of toxicokinetics in rats and dogs
  • Figure 5.11 Temporal arrangement of safety studies during the first 3-4 years of development
  • Figure 5.12 Summary of the three aspects of reproductive toxicology
  • Figure 5.13 Sample protocol for EFD study in the rat
  • Figure 5.14 Chromosomal matching and identification of aberration in CHO cells
  • Figure 5.15 Sigmoid - S-shaped - dose/response curve
  • Figure 5.16 Schematic to show potential ADME fates of absorbed drugs
  • Figure 5.17 An illustration of plasma protein binding
  • Figure 5.18 Metabolic map containing a [14]C label in a metabolically stable position. Major metabolites can now be tracked and quantified through the determination of radioactive emissions
  • Figure 5.19 Fundamental principles of a mass balance study using a radio-labelled drug substance
  • Figure 5.20 Illustration of HMG CoA RI drug absorption through GI wall and return in the bile
  • Figure 5.21 The eternal triangle revisited
  • Figure 6.1 Comparative effects of an NME and budesonide for their ability to induce vasoconstriction in human forearm skin
  • Figure 6.2 Graphs to show effects of PDE4 inhibitor upon TNFa generation and the induction of nausea
  • Figure 8.1 Comparison of US and UK regulatory procedures before May 2004
  • Figure 8.2 Four levels of application recognised by the EMEA to market new medical products
  • Figure 8.3 Generic format of the common technical document
  • Figure 10.1 The changing emphasis of drug safety responsibilities
Description

[Report]
How Drugs Are Developed: 3rd Edition
Published: 2007/09
Published by : PJB Publications Ltd. PJB Publications Ltd.

Price:
US $ 2,300.00 PDF by E-mail (Single User License)
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Product Code : PJB58828
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