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Is there a best strategy for drug discovery?
Towards the end of the 1990s, several studies were undertaken to assess
the efficiency with which the pharmaceutical industry was conducting its
business. Most studies were content to report the metrics of drug discovery
- essentially the numbers of compounds succeeding and failing in given
time periods - but the exercise conducted by Anderson Brothers, in collaboration
with most major pharmaceutical companies, sought to provide some predictive
power to the figures generated. Briefly, the study concluded that a medium
sized organisation with an annual turnover of approximately $5 billion
would need to launch 3 new molecular entities each year to maintain a
10% growth rate.
The report went further and, based upon known attrition rates, predicted
that for these production rates to be achieved, a company’s development
pipeline would number between 15-30 products at any one time. The numbers
of discovery projects required to feed this cycle, were similarly calculated
from industry average failure rates. Over a four year period, the guarantee
of 3 NMEs per year equated to a range of 150 - 300 discovery projects
with 38 - 75 being completed each year. ("Completed" in this
sense equates to transition to development or cessation.) These astonishing
revelations were countered by the comments that the numbers in the pipeline
could be markedly reduced through the delivery of "development ready"
products from drug discovery departments.
It was surely no accident that comments and conclusions from the above
study (and others) coincided with a technological revolution within the
industry. The sequencing of the human genome was not only nearing completion
but had spawned a number of techniques through which novel proteins (and,
therefore, potential drug targets) could be identified. From the chemical
laboratories there emerged the capabilities of combinatorial chemistry
and later, those of parallel synthesis. The biochemists matched the production
rates of the chemists with high throughput screening.
In response to the request for "development ready" compounds,
high throughput biopharmaceutical methods were established to assess drug
delivery properties (eg cell absorption assays, metabolic stability assessments,
high througput analytical methods). Equally, there was the development
of early safety studies designed to identify mutagenicity and cytotoxicity,
and methods aimed towards the detection and categorization of structural
toxophores.
Now, 5 to 6 years on from these initiatives it is timely to assess the
improvements in drug discovery which have become established. The Society
has gathered a singularly distinguished panel of speakers to comment upon
the impact that the recent years have had. Has the rate of drug discovery
increased? Have we become more incisive? What is being done well and what
not so well and how do we measure these parameters? These are the questions
that will form the focus of the day. We hope that you enjoy it.
For and on behalf of the Society for Medicines Research
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