This document discusses the drug development and approval process, including:
1) Sources of new drugs can come from natural products and lead compounds are tested for desired activities.
2) Drugs undergo preclinical and clinical trials in 4 phases to test safety, efficacy, and side effects.
3) An Investigational New Drug application is submitted for clinical trials and a New Drug Application is required for marketing approval.
This document discusses the drug development and approval process, including:
1) Sources of new drugs can come from natural products and lead compounds are tested for desired activities.
2) Drugs undergo preclinical and clinical trials in 4 phases to test safety, efficacy, and side effects.
3) An Investigational New Drug application is submitted for clinical trials and a New Drug Application is required for marketing approval.
This document discusses the drug development and approval process, including:
1) Sources of new drugs can come from natural products and lead compounds are tested for desired activities.
2) Drugs undergo preclinical and clinical trials in 4 phases to test safety, efficacy, and side effects.
3) An Investigational New Drug application is submitted for clinical trials and a New Drug Application is required for marketing approval.
This document discusses the drug development and approval process, including:
1) Sources of new drugs can come from natural products and lead compounds are tested for desired activities.
2) Drugs undergo preclinical and clinical trials in 4 phases to test safety, efficacy, and side effects.
3) An Investigational New Drug application is submitted for clinical trials and a New Drug Application is required for marketing approval.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES 1. Give examples of the sources of new drugs 2. Differentiate between the various methods of drug discovery 3. Define pharmacology, drug metabolism, and toxicology 4. Differentiate between Phase 1, Phase 2, Phase 3, and Phase 4 clinical trials 5. Compare and contrast an Investigational New Drug (IND) Application from a New Drug Application (NDA) SOURCES OF NEW DRUGS • New drugs may be DRUGS SOURCES USES discovered from a variety Reserpine Rauwolfia Hypotensive of natural sources serpentina agent Tranquilizer Vinblastine, Vinca rosa Anti tumor Vincristine Taxol Taxus Treatment for brevifolia Acute Leukemia, Hodgkin disease, Lymphocytic lymphoma LEAD COMPOUND • is a prototype chemical compound that has a fundamental desired biologic or pharmacologic activity. • Although active, the lead compound may not possess all of the features desired, such as potency, absorbability, solubility, low toxicity, and so forth. PRODRUG • is a term used to describe a compound that requires metabolic biotransformation after administration to produce the desired pharmacologically active compound. • The conversion of an inactive prodrug to an active compound occurs primarily through enzymatic biochemical cleavage. • Example: enalapril maleate (Vasotec) SOLUBILITY • A prodrug may be designed to possess solubility advantages over the active drug, enabling the use of specifically desired dosage forms and routes of administration. ABSORPTION • A drug may be made more water or lipid soluble, as desired, to facilitate absorption via the intended route of administration. BIOSTABILITY • If an active drug is prematurely destroyed by biochemical or enzymatic processes, the design of a prodrug may protect the drug during its transport in the body. PROLONGED RELEASE • Depending on a prodrug’s rate of metabolic conversion to an active drug, it may provide prolonged drug release and extended therapeutic activity TOXICOLOGY • Toxicology deals with the adverse or undesired effects of drugs. Although the ability to predict the safe use of a new drug in humans based on preclinical animal studies is desirable, it is not entirely achievable DRUG METABOLISM (a) the extent and rate of drug absorption from various routes of administration, including the one intended for human use; (b) the rate of distribution of the drug through the body and the site or sites and duration of the drug’s residence; (c) the rate, primary and secondary sites, the mechanism of the drug’s metabolism in the body, and the chemistry and pharmacology of any metabolites; and (d) the proportion of administered dose eliminated from the body and its rate and route of elimination. CLINICAL RESEARCH PHASE STUDIES PHASE 1 • Study participants: 20-100 healthy volunteers or people with the disease/condition • Length of study: several months • Purpose: safety and dosage • Approximately 70% of drugs move to the next phase CLINICAL RESEARCH PHASE STUDIES PHASE 2 • Study participants: up to several hundred people with the disease/condition • Length of study: Several months to 2 years • Purpose: Efficacy and side effects • Approximately 33% of drugs move to the next phase CLINICAL RESEARCH PHASE STUDIES PHASE 3 • Study participants: 300 – 3,000 volunteers who have the disease/condition • Length of study: 1 – 4 years • Purpose: efficacy and monitoring of adverse reactions • Approximately 25-30% of drugs move to the next phase CLINICAL RESEARCH PHASE STUDIES PHASE 4 • Post-Marketing Surveillance • Study participants: several thousand volunteers who have the disease/condition • Purpose: safety and efficacy DRUG DEVELOPMENT AND APPROVAL PROCESS INVESTIGATIONAL NEW DRUG (IND) - to protect the rights and safety of the subjects - to ensure that the investigational plan is sound and is designed to achieve the stated objectives