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DRUG DEVELOPMENT from Research Bench to Pharmacy Shelf

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The drug research process is complicated. Time-consuming. Costly ... two species are required for toxicity studies one rodent one non-rodent ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: DRUG DEVELOPMENT from Research Bench to Pharmacy Shelf


1
DRUG DEVELOPMENTfromResearch Bench to Pharmacy
Shelf
2
Synthesis and Purification
  • The drug research process is complicated
  • Time-consuming
  • Costly
  • End result rarely produces a therapeutic
  • 1 chance in 5000
  • Whole process takes up to 12 years

3
Synthesis and Purification
  • There is no standard route for drug discovery
  • Sometimes a pharmaceutical company will choose a
    particular disease
  • Sometimes researchers at a drug company discover
    a therapeutic with several prospects

4
Synthesis and Purification
  • Quite often the ground breaking work was
    initially completed at a university or government
    laboratory
  • The company may decide to pursue this research
  • Many drugs arise from an understanding of how the
    cell/body works
  • How to interact to correct problems

5
Synthesis and Purification
  • Sometimes natural products are screened for
    therapeutic benefit
  • Example, certain antibiotics from fungi

6
Overview
  • Basic research results
  • Potential uses
  • Limited animal trials
  • Decisions regarding pre-IND tests
  • Extensive animal testing
  • Filing Investigative New Drug (IND) application

7
Overview
  • Accumulating data from all trials and experiments
    including in vitro data and all animal data
  • Collect all data about the potential product
  • Examine methods of purification of product
  • Examine cost of producing product
  • Is the market large enough will any profit be
    realized

8
Overview
  • Writing the IND report
  • Filing to the regulatory agencies
  • Permission to proceed with phase I trial
  • Clinical trial study design
  • Selection of phase I candidates
  • Submission of results to regulatory agency

9
Overview
  • Proceed to Phase II
  • Patient selection
  • Submit results to regulatory agency
  • Proceed to phase III
  • Extensive data collection monitoring of data
  • Release for general use (Phase IV)

10
Basic Research
  • Run monoclonal antibody against specific type of
    cancers
  • Choose cancer type with highest affinity for new
    antibody (or several )
  • Choose to do very limited animal studies
  • Based upon above data decide is feasible or not
    to proceed to an IND filing

11
Pre-Clinical Research
  • The data submitted to the FDA will include all
    non-clinical data
  • This includes animal data and bench-top data
  • During pre-clinical the company evaluates toxic
    effects
  • Pharmacological profile of the drug

12
Pre-Clinical Research
  • Drug absorption and metabolism
  • Speed at which the drug is excreted from the body
  • A pharmacological profile must be presented
  • This would include all toxicity data from at
    least two species (both must be non-human)

13
Animal Studies
  • Most often conducted by specialized companies
  • FDA requires that a minimum number of animals be
    used
  • All animal care certificates ensuring proper
    treatment of animals must be submitted to the FDA

14
Animal Studies
  • Required by Law before any human testing can be
    conducted
  • Types of pre-clinical animal studies vary
  • From toxicology studies to disease model
    protocols
  • Data must be carefully analyzed and submitted as
    apart of the IND

15
Animal Studies
  • Usually two species are required for toxicity
    studies one rodent one non-rodent
  • Drugs effect different animals in different ways
  • The animal studies also include absorption into
    the blood
  • Tells what the breakdown products are

16
Decisions
  • What is the market for this potential
    therapeutic?
  • Is the product best as a therapeutic or for
    diagnostic
  • Is the indication a chronic disease or a
    potentially fatal disease

17
Decisions
  • What is the market?
  • What is the competition?
  • Can it be Fast Tracked?
  • How many people contracted the disease in the
    U.S.?
  • Can we gain a market share?

18
Decisions
  • Manufacturing considerations
  • Will the lab bench top purification procedures
    work in a large scale manufacturing facility?
  • Can it be manufactured at a reasonable cost?
  • Will the cost be competitive?

19
Production
  • Choices of manufacture
  • e.g. Full size monoclonal antibodies are proteins
    with sugar groups attached (glycoproteins)
  • Using biotechnology they must be made in
    eukaryotic cells

20
Production
  • Smaller derivatives of antibodies can be made
    called fragments (scFv)
  • No sugar groups
  • Can be made in bacterial cells e.g. E. coli
  • Fragments are far more cost effective

21
Antibody Design
S
S
scFv
IgG
22
Patents
  • Must patent new drug
  • Must demonstrate its worth
  • Patent process takes up to 2 years or more
  • Must NOT publish anything on new drug before
    patent
  • Even a seminar on product can place it in the
    public domain

23
Quality Assurance (QA)
  • Important aspect the pharmaceutical/biotech
    industry
  • Assures complete records of every procedure
    involved in the drug discovery program
  • Also guides behavior of researchers and support
    staff

24
Quality Assurance
  • Every experiment ever conducted in the research
    laboratory must be recorded in a note book and
    signed by two researchers
  • Researchers must change lab coats daily
  • Researchers with infectious illness (cold) must
    report to supervisor

25
Quality Assurance
  • During phase III trials (or even at Phase II)
    inspectors from the regulatory agency have a site
    visit
  • All records and procedures are scrutinized
  • All equipment used to research and prepare drug
    are inspected
  • The company may also be scrutinized with respect
    to its financial position

26
Quality Assurance
  • Ensures record keeping and history of every piece
    of equipment used on the drug discovery program
  • Logs must be kept as to usage and maintenance
  • From pH meters to expensive chromatographic
    machines

27
Investigational New DrugApplication (IND)
  • Produced after all in vitro and animal studies
    are complete
  • And after company decides the therapeutic is
    worth marketing
  • The IND is filed with the regulatory agency
  • Basically it is the request for permission to
    proceed to human clinical trials

28
Investigational New DrugApplication (IND)
  • The IND becomes effective if the regulatory body
    (FDA) does not disapprove within 30 days
  • The IND shows the results of all early
    experimental data
  • All in vitro data

29
Investigational New DrugApplication (IND)
  • The IND contains all of the chemistry of the drug
  • How it will be purified (in the lab and in the
    plant)
  • Mechanism of action (how it works in the body)
  • ANY toxic effects in the animal studies

30
Investigational New DrugApplication (IND)
  • Where will the human trials be conducted?
  • Who is the independent clinical trials physician?
  • The report from the Review Board of the
    institution where the trials will be completed
  • An agreement to submit annual reports

31
Pre-clinical
Phase I
Phase II
Phase III
FDA
YEARS
3.5
1-2
2.0
3.5
2.5
Patients
20-80
100-300
1000-3000
Biological Activity and safety
Long term use Effectiveness Adverse reactions
Safety and dosage
Effectiveness And safety
Purpose
Total time 12 years minimum
32
Pre-clinical
Clinical Studies
NDA Review
Synthesis and Purification
Phase I
Phase II
Phase III
Animal Testing
Accelerated Development
IND Submitted
33
Phase I
  • This is the initial introduction of the drug into
    humans
  • Most often conducted in healthy volunteers
  • Sometimes patients
  • Phase I studies are to determine the metabolic
    and pharmacological actions in humans

34
Phase I
  • Studies include side-effects with increased drug
    administered
  • If patients are used, early evidence of
    effectiveness
  • This phase gives data as to, pharmacokinetics and
    pharmacological effects

35
Phase I
  • These studies also are used to determine or
    confirm mechanism of action
  • Determine if drug would perform better as a
    diagnostic tool
  • During Phase I the regulatory agency can shut
    down the trial at any time
  • The regulatory agency may advise as to the
    continuation of the trial

36
Phase II
  • Controlled studies of 100-300 patient volunteers
    with the disease
  • Assess the drugs effectiveness
  • Takes about 2 years
  • Phase two also helps determine short-term side
    effects
  • Risks associated with the drug are also evaluated

37
Phase III
  • Phase three last for around three years
  • Involves 1000-3000 patients
  • These patients are monitored very closely to
    assess efficacy and adverse reactions
  • They are an expanded version of Phase II
  • Only performed after complete regulatory agency
    approval

38
Phase III
  • Benefit risk evaluations can be assessed at
    this level
  • Larger patient population base allows for a more
    accurate extrapolation to the larger general
    population
  • Patient population in phase III is up to 3000

39
Phase III
  • Most of the information for the insert label is
    gathered from Phase III data
  • The regulatory agency can interrupt the study if
    the protocol is deemed incorrect or not
    sufficient
  • Also, the trial can be stopped if the current
    state of scientific knowledge changes

40
Approval
  • Regulatory body approval of the NDA
  • Drug becomes available to physicians
  • The company must continue to submit periodic
    reports
  • Particular monitoring of adverse reactions
  • For some drugs a Phase IV is required (this is
    for long term effects)

41
Approval
  • Research pharmaceutical companies invested 12.6
    billion in RD in 2001
  • Average cost per successful drug is between
    100-300 million
  • 1 chance in 5000 from bench top
  • 1 chance in five through clinical trials

42
Approval
  • Rituximab an anti-cancer antibody against
    non-Hodgkins lymphoma grossed 1.3 billion in
    the first 18 months
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