Lecture 56 – drug discovery Flashcards
Choice of a disease
o Commercially driven choose
o Unmet medical need
o Significant market
o Market share opportunity
target identification
o Known biology of the disuse
o Result of target finding
o Based on endogenous or plant-derived ligand with known activity
o Omics-based search
Target identification using omics
o Gene expression measured by microarray in this study now usually by RT-qPCR or Next generation sequencing
o The potential target gene is not regulated by anti-TNF biologicals, but associates with disease severity, HLA and presence of autoantibody
Target evaluation using transgenic told
o Use of GFP
o Drug discovery can also use GFP to determine location of tumour thus target it
Target validation
o Transgenics -/- or overexpression
o Natural variants Ob/Ob mouse
o Induced mutations with nitroso-urea
o Targeted approaches
o CRISPR Cas9
o siRNA on cells and in vivo
screening
o finding the molecular hit
o target based or cell phenotype
From “Molecular hit” to lead compound through medicinal chemistry
o Potent and selective
o Lipinski’s rule of 5 (features of chemical structure eg, ideally mw<500)
o Aqueous solubility (for oral absorption)
o Permeable through epithelial cell layers
o Oral availability in experimental animals
o Metabolic satiability in liver extract
o Sufficient plasma T1/2 to have effect exposure in vivo
Lead optimisation
o From lead compound to drug candidate
o Wishlist features
Aqueous solubility
No reactive metabolites
No major active metabolites
Not metabolised by polymorphic enzymes
T1/2 to allow “reasonable” dose interval
COX2 selectivity – hydrophobic pocket size
o Target driven
o Enzyme cloned
o Product crystalised cf COX-1
o Structure based design
COX-2 selective and safety:efficacy ratio
o Lack of divergence in 1st year
o Placebo control
o Dose-related cardiovascular complications
Phenotype-based drug discovery
o Know effects:
Appetite stimulation/anti-nauseant
Analgesia
Sedation
Psych activity
Drug discovery to market launch
o Discovery 2-5 years
o Preclinical development 3 years
o Phase I 2 years
o Phase II 2.9 years
o Phase III 3.5 years
o Launch (after NDA filing) 1.8 years
o On average 13.2 years
Loss and profit in drug discovery to market journey
o Initially small loss in discovery and preclinical phase
o Major drop during clinical phase
o Large growth over sales, less marketing costs
o Begins to drop back down after patent expiry, generic competition
New drug approvals
o Why not?
o The low fruit are picked
o New technologies (omics) not the productivity driver
o The bar is getting higher e.g. safety and selectivity