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Samenvatting preclincial drug research

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Full summary of the course 'Preclinical drug research' taught bij prof. Van Cruchten and prof. Delputte. The summary counts 64 pages and includes all info from the slides and lessons. Also the guest courses about 'biopharmaceuticals' are inlcuded.

Voorbeeld 4 van de 64  pagina's

  • 20 februari 2024
  • 64
  • 2023/2024
  • Samenvatting
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nikitacassimon
Nikita Cassimon 2e master geneesmiddelenontwikkeling: biofarmaceutische wetenschappen



Preclinical Drug Research
Introduction:


Molecule Drug
Up to 12 years
Costly
Depends on target population and market


Small molecules
• SMI = Small Molecular Entities Ex. aspirin, fluoxetine,
Chemicals
• Oral administration omeprazole
• For many diseases not a solution
Complex molecules Ex. artemether, paclitaxel,
Natural products
vinblastine
Large (complex) molecules
• Also: New Therapeutic Modalities =
Biologicals biopharmaceuticals + gene therapy Ex. insulin, interferon, EPO
included
• Parenteral administration


Drug R&D spending in different industry sectors & therapeutic areas:




• Biggest cost for • Spendings in • Smaller countries, smaller
biopharmaceuticals pharmaceutical companies expenses
because of small target increase • Cost of bringing a new SMI
population • Not many drugs are or biological to the market
• Ex. 200k euros for 1 approved → if approved it keeps increasing over the
administration in 1 patient needs to compensate for al years
the expenses and failures
• ‘Fail fast Fail cheap’



Major disease areas:

1. Cardiovascular diseases
2. Neoplasm (cancer)
• 3. Respiratory system diseases
• 4. Digestive system diseases
5. CNS diseases

,Nikita Cassimon 2e master geneesmiddelenontwikkeling: biofarmaceutische wetenschappen


R&D spending & therapeutic areas:

• Biggest investment: clinical trials → facilities in the world and amount of patients
• Need for a nonclinical package depends on the patients
• Phase I CT: healty young males people → no women: potential fertilty danger + abortion →
recovery spermatogenesis after a few months
• Conclusion: risk in men is lower + smaller clinical package (less data needed)


Other factors:




Annual population growth Healthcare spending in relation Pharmaceutical sales by
rates: to age: region:
• Ideal: lot of target patients • Diseases/treatments • Most sales: USA → a lot of
• China: boost of pharma increase with ages OTC in supermarkets
companies → competition • You don’t want: adverse • Emerging: China
• Latin America: less effects → • Established ROW: India,
investment subtherapeutic dose Brazil
• Africa: increasing trend • = RISK/BENEFIT-ratio


Total cost for one new marketed drug = about 0.8 – 1.5 billion USD (depends on therapeutic area)



Orphan diseases = diseases occuring in a low amount of patients → definition depends on the place
and amount of patients (< 1000)

• Pharmaceutical companies don’t make profit with the development or drugs → you can make
profit if you’re ‘first-in-class’
• Investment by the Bill Gates foundation
• Some bigger companies tactically buy smaller companies to make profit



Compensate
investment by
making profit after
Decrease of profit
launching the drug
after expiring
patent + generic
competition
Investment in clinial
development → no
profit is made here

, Nikita Cassimon 2e master geneesmiddelenontwikkeling: biofarmaceutische wetenschappen


Blockbuster drug = a drug with sales > 1 billion USD/year

• Ex. Humira: 20 USD/year
• Blockbuster drugs moslty come from bigger companies, because they can afford a big investment
• Detectives visit smaller companies and detect drugs with potential,bigger companies later buy
them or steal the idea and license it




Top launches 2019: Patents: Competition in pharmaceutical
• Increase of • Patent will expire after 20 market:
biopharmaceuticals years, but 12 years are • Most profit fort he ‘first-in-
• Nonclinical package needed to develop drug → class’ developper
specialized for monoclonal profit for 8 years • Shrinking period of market
AB • SPC = supplementary exclusivity
• Gene therapy → protection certificate → • Inceased competition
companies decide what max. +5 years extra between pharmaceutical
refund the patient will get patented companies
Ex. Zolgensma • Me-too drugs = drugs die
op elkaar lijken


• Generics: high volume, high level of
competition, low value product, low medical
differentiation
• Mega-blockbusters: everything medium
• Targeted therapeutics: low volume, low level
of competition, high product value, high
medical differentiation


Failure rates in drug development:


‘Fail Fast Fail Cheap’



Phase I: No adverse
effects in young healthy
men

Approved: post-marketting
Phase II: Lack of efficacy issues → impact on image
on bigger scale of company

, Nikita Cassimon 2e master geneesmiddelenontwikkeling: biofarmaceutische wetenschappen


Biotechnology-derived medicines:

• Oligonucleotides working on mRNA
• Small interfering RNAs Larger proportion of
• Micro RNAs ‘first-in-class’
• Vaccines therapeutics
• Monoclonal antibodies

Ex. In 1982: Recombinant human insulin or Humulin®

Major pharmaceutical companies (from biggest to smallest):




• Locations: 150 countries • Locations: > 140 countries and > 100,000
• Headquarter: Basel, Switzerland employees
• Diagnostics • Headquarter: Basel, Switzerland
• Sandoz for generics




• Locations: > 150 countries • Locations: 120 countries
• Headquarter: New York, USA • Headquarter: Whitehouse Station, New
• Belgian sites: Puurs (no R&D but Jersey, USA
manufacturing)
• Offers a broadspectrum of drugs
• Drugs not approved for humans used for
animals




• Locations: > 55 countries • Locations: > 100 countries and > 100,000
• Headquarter: New Brunswick, New Jersey, employees
USA • Headquarter: Paris, France
• Beerse: R&D, pharmaceutical production • Ablynx is bought by Sanofi in 2018
(tablets, ointments, e.a.)
• Geel: chemical production (API)
• Olen: pharmaceutical production




• Locations: 117 countries • Locations: mainly Japan, but also
• Headquarter: UK Switzerland, USA, UK and Singapore
• OTC and toothpaste focused • Headquarter: Osaka, Japan

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