Drug Discovery Flashcards

1
Q

Drug development entails 3 main components

A

➢Drug discovery
➢Preclinical development (small pharma companies)
➢Clinical development

❖ For most part it takes at least 12 years for a
drug to make it to market

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2
Q

Target Selection

what are me too drugs

A
➢Exenatide first GLP-1R agonist for type 2 diabetes
➢Liraglutide
➢Albiglutide
➢Lixisenatide
➢Dulaglutide
  • Usually many similar drugs are made as exenatide is in development
  • Aggressive marketing to get me too drugs approved
  • Lixisenatide - no increase in HR - musch shorter half life
  • Liraglutide - weight loss
  • Not always better than first in class
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3
Q
Target Selection
first in class drug ex
A

Canagliflozin as the 1st SGLT2 inhibitor approved for the treatment of T2D

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4
Q

Drug Discovery Phase

what is target selection based on (3)
what happens after?

A

If not designing a ‘me-too’ drug, one needs to
identify the new molecular target

based on current knowledge of disease pathology/mechanisms
➢Altered signaling pathways
➢Genomic data
➢Proteomic data

Once target identified, need to develop an assay to measure whether a drug candidate modifies the target

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5
Q

Examples of target selection using current

biological knowledge

A

ACE inhibitors improve hypertension by preventing
formation of angiotensin II
➢ Rationale to identify and develop antagonists for the angiotensin II receptor (“sartan” class of drugs)

Effectiveness of GLP-1 to enhance insulin secretion is
limited due to immediate cleavage via dipeptidyl
peptidase 4 (DPP-4)
➢ Rationale to developing degradation-resistant GLP-1 receptor agonists (e.g. exenatide)
➢ Rationale to develop DPP-4 inhibitors (e.g. “gliptin” class of drugs)

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6
Q

Preclinical Development

4 components

A
  • Pharmacological testing (safety pharmacology)
  • Preliminary toxicology testing
  • Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic testing
  • Chemical/Pharmaceutical development

Much of the preclinical development stage is
performed under a standard operating code referred
to as “Good Laboratory Practice (GLP)”

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7
Q

Clinical Development Phase I Studies

A

small group of healthy volunteers (20-80

people) to assess safety and pharmacokinetics of the drug

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8
Q

Clinical Development Phase II Studies

A

performed in small groups of patients (100-
300 people) to determine whether the lead compound has clinically beneficial pharmacodynamic effects for the intended patient population

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9
Q

Clinical Development Phase III Studies

A

double-blind randomized placebo controlled trials on 1000s of patients to assess efficacy of the drug versus placebo or standard of care

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10
Q

Clinical Development Phase IV Studies

A

post-marketing surveillance studies with the purpose of detecting long-term or rare adverse effects from using the drug in the real clinical setting

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11
Q

GLP-1 Increases Insulin Secretion

A

Initial discovery of GLP-1’s biological action
- In 1987 it is observed that GLP-1 increases gene expression of insulin and intracellular cAMP levels in a rat islet cell line
- Treatment of the isolated perfused pancreas with
truncated GLP-1 (7-37) results in increased insulin
secretion. Follow up studies demonstrated that GLP-1 was released from the intestine following meal ingestion and became the 2nd identified incretin hormone

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12
Q

Use of Genetically Modified Mice to Illustrate a Key Role for GLP-1 as a Critical Regulator of Glycemia

A

If GLP-1 promotes glucose uptake following nutrient
ingestion, then mice with reduced GLP-1 action (via deletion of the GLP-1 receptor) should have elevated blood glucose levels following glucose ingestion

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13
Q

Limitations of Native GLP-1

A
  • Dipeptidyl-peptidase 4 (DPP-4) is the primary enzyme responsible for the inactivation of GLP-1
    • Degradation-resistant GLP-1R agonists and DPP-4
    inhibitors were thus developed for the treatment of type 2 diabetes
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14
Q

what does the gila monster produce?

A

GLP-1 Homologue Exendin-4 (from venom) that Activates the GLP-1 Receptor
- Actions above are prevented via treatment with a GLP-1R antagonist?

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15
Q

Exendin-4 Overexpression in Mice Increases ________ and ___________

A

Insulin Secretion & Improves Glycemia

  • Exendin-4 is the lizard homologue of GLP-1 and mice were made to overexpress this protein
  • These mice exhibit improved glucose tolerance and increased plasma insulin levels
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16
Q

What was shown in a phase II study with exenatide?

A

a Phase II study, exenatide (recombinant exendin-4,
AC2993), improved glucose tolerance in people with type 2 diabetes not achieving optimal control with metformin and/or sulfonylurea therapy
• A total of 109 patients studied over 4-weeks

17
Q

What was shown in a phase III study with exenatide?

Exenatide is Approved for the Treatment
of Type 2 Diabetes on April 28, 2005

A
  • In a Phase III study, exenatide improved glucose tolerance in people with type 2 diabetes also receiving metformin
  • A total of 336 patients were studied over 30-weeks in 82 clinical sites in the USA
18
Q

“Me-Too” GLP-1R Agonists (4)

A
  • Exenatide (2005)
  • Liraglutide (2010)
  • Albiglutide (2014)
  • Dulaglutide (2014)
  • Lixisenatide (2016)
19
Q

A Changing Landscape for Drug
Development in Type 2 Diabetes

why have many drug manufacturers have exited the business of drug development in the area of type 2 diabetes

A

■ Historical pathway for drug development involved 6-12 month studies in phase 3 trials of 1000 – 3000 patients, with a primary endpoint of significant reductions in glycated hemoglobin (HbA1C levels)
■ Because heart disease represents the number one cause of death for people with type 2 diabetes, in order to get a drug for type 2 diabetes approved by a regulatory agency, large-scale cardiovascular outcomes trials in thousands of patients over an additional 2 – 5 years are required