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El. knyga: Emerging Safety Science: Workshop Summary

  • Formatas: 150 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 08-Apr-2008
  • Leidėjas: National Academies Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780309178174
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 150 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 08-Apr-2008
  • Leidėjas: National Academies Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780309178174
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In recent years, the costs of new drug development have skyrocketed. The average cost of developing a new approved drug is now estimated to be $1.3 billion (DiMasi and Grabowski, 2007). At the same time, each year fewer new molecular entities (NMEs) are approved. DiMasi and Grabowski report that only 21.5 percent of the candidate drugs that enter phase I clinical testing actually make it to market. In 2007, just 17 novel drugs and 2 novel biologics were approved. In addition to the slowing rate of drug development and approval, recent years have seen a number of drugs withdrawn from the market for safety reasons. According to the Government Accountability Office (GAO), 10 drugs were withdrawn because of safety concerns between 2000 and March 2006 (GAO, 2006). Finding ways to select successful drug candidates earlier in development could save millions or even billions of dollars, reduce the costs of drugs on the market, and increase the number of new drugs with improved safety profiles that are available to patients.





Emerging scientific knowledge and technologies hold the potential to enhance correct decision making for the advancement of candidate drugs. Identification of safety problems is a key reason that new drug development is stalled. Traditional methods for assessing a drug's safety prior to approval are limited in their ability to detect rare safety problems. Prior to receiving U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval, a drug will have been tested in hundreds to thousands of patients. Generally, drugs cannot confidently be linked to safety problems until they have been tested in tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of people. With current methods, it is unlikely that rare safety problems will be identified prior to approval.

Emerging Safety Science: Workshop Summary summarizes the events and presentations of the workshop.Table of Contents



Front Matter 1 Introduction 2 Investigative Toxicology: The State of the Art 3 Screening Technologies I: Human CellBased Approaches 4 Screening Technologies II: Toxicogenomics 5 Screening Technologies III: Metabolomics 6 Screening Technologies IV: Pharmacogenetics 7 Qualifying Biomarkers 8 Pharmacovigilance 9 Integration 10 The Future of Safety Science References Appendix A: Workshop Agenda Appendix B: Speaker Biographies
1 INTRODUCTION
1
2 INVESTIGATIVE TOXICOLOGY: THE STATE OF THE ART
5
Pulmonary Hemorrhage,
6
Bone Physeal Abnormalities,
7
Heart Valve Lesions,
10
Summary,
11
3 SCREENING TECHNOLOGIES I: HUMAN CELL–BASED APPROACHES
13
The Ideal Screen,
13
The BioMAP System,
14
Contextual Drug Analysis,
22
Summary,
27
4 SCREENING TECHNOLOGIES II: TOXICOGENOMICS
28
Modernizing Predictive Toxicology,
28
Toxicogenomics at Iconix,
30
Toxicogenomics at Bristol-Myers Squibb,
35
Toxicogenomics at Abbott Laboratories,
41
Summary,
48
5 SCREENING TECHNOLOGIES III: METABOLOMICS
50
Metabolomics at Metabolon,
51
Metabolomics at Biocrates,
55
6 SCREENING TECHNOLOGIES IV: PHARMACOGENETICS
59
Abacavir and the Hypersensitivity Reaction,
59
The Abacavir Pharmacogenetics Program,
60
Implications for the Future,
64
7 QUALIFYING BIOMARKERS
65
The Ideal Biomarker,
65
Qualification of Nephrotoxicity Biomarkers,
66
Summary,
73
8 PHARMACOVIGILANCE
74
Pharmacovigilance at GlaxoSmithKline,
74
Statistical Issues in Analyzing Spontaneous Report Databases,
77
Active Surveillance for Anticipated Adverse Events,
84
9 INTEGRATION
93
An Integration Tool at GlaxoSmithKline,
93
The Elsevier Database (PharmaPendium),
96
An FDA Perspective,
99
10 THE FUTURE OF SAFETY SCIENCE 106
Prediction,
106
Surveillance,
108
Summary,
114
REFERENCES 115
APPENDIXES
A Workshop Agenda
117
B Speaker Biographies
125
Sally Robinson, Robert Pool, and Robert Giffin, Forum on Drug Discovery, Development, and Translation, Institute of Medicine