Drug repositioning: identifying and developing new uses for existing drugs

被引:0
|
作者
Ted T. Ashburn
Karl B. Thor
机构
[1] Dynogen Pharmaceuticals,
[2] Inc.,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The process of finding new uses outside the scope of the original medical indication for existing drugs is known as drug repositioning. Repositioning existing drugs for new indications can offer a better risk-versus-reward trade-off as compared with other drug development strategies, and can help to deliver the productivity increases the industry needs while shifting the locus of production to biotechnology companies. Representative repositioning success stories include: duloxetine, which was originally developed for depression and is now at the US FDA as a first-in-class therapy for stress urinary incontinence; dapoxetine, which was passed over as a follow-on to fluoxetine (Prozac) and is now undergoing Phase III clinical trials as a first-in-class therapy for premature ejaculation; and thalidomide, which had a tragic beginning as an over-the-counter sedative for morning sickness in Germany and England and is now being used to treat leprosy and multiple myeloma. Challenges unique to the repositioning field include: discovering and validating the repositioning idea in the face of incomplete or antiquated data and identifying the repositioning candidate; developing novel clinical trial designs for indications that have never been pursued before; identifying and overcoming patents that could impede commercialization and developing new barriers to entry strategies. Pharmaceutical companies might own most of the raw material for repositioned drugs, but the initiative and insight to screen them for novel uses usually comes from biotech companies, who possess the ideal combination of incentives to pursue new indications for existing drugs given their level of entrepreneurship, motivation (succeed or die) and institutional flexibility.
引用
收藏
页码:673 / 683
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Repositioning "old" drugs for new causes: identifying new inhibitors of prostate cancer cell migration and invasion
    Shah, Esha T.
    Upadhyaya, Akanksha
    Philp, Lisa K.
    Tang, Tiffany
    Skalamera, Dubravka
    Gunter, Jennifer
    Nelson, Colleen C.
    Williams, Elizabeth D.
    Hollier, Brett G.
    CLINICAL & EXPERIMENTAL METASTASIS, 2016, 33 (04) : 385 - 399
  • [22] Old drugs, new uses: Drug repurposing in hematological malignancies
    Kale, Vijay P.
    Habib, Hasan
    Chitren, Robert
    Patel, Milan
    Pramanik, Kartick C.
    Jonnalagadda, Subash C.
    Challagundla, Kishore
    Pandey, Manoj K.
    SEMINARS IN CANCER BIOLOGY, 2021, 68 : 242 - 248
  • [23] Repositioning “old” drugs for new causes: identifying new inhibitors of prostate cancer cell migration and invasion
    Esha T. Shah
    Akanksha Upadhyaya
    Lisa K. Philp
    Tiffany Tang
    Dubravka Skalamera
    Jennifer Gunter
    Colleen C. Nelson
    Elizabeth D. Williams
    Brett G. Hollier
    Clinical & Experimental Metastasis, 2016, 33 : 385 - 399
  • [24] Exploring new uses for existing drugs: innovative mechanisms to fund independent clinical research
    Ciska Verbaanderd
    Ilse Rooman
    Isabelle Huys
    Trials, 22
  • [25] Exploring new uses for existing drugs: innovative mechanisms to fund independent clinical research
    Verbaanderd, Ciska
    Rooman, Ilse
    Huys, Isabelle
    TRIALS, 2021, 22 (01)
  • [26] Existing Drug Repurposing for Glioblastoma to Discover Candidate Drugs as a New a Approach
    Yang, Bo
    Wang, Xiande
    Dong, Dong
    Pan, Yunqing
    Wu, Junhua
    Liu, Jianjian
    LETTERS IN DRUG DESIGN & DISCOVERY, 2022, 19 (01) : 31 - 43
  • [28] Discovering New Uses for Existing Molecules
    不详
    JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 2012, 53 (08) : 19N - 20N
  • [29] Finding New Uses for Existing Medications
    不详
    CANCER DISCOVERY, 2012, 2 (02) : 100 - 100
  • [30] Repositioning the Old Fungicide Ciclopirox for New Medical Uses
    Shen, Tao
    Huang, Shile
    CURRENT PHARMACEUTICAL DESIGN, 2016, 22 (28) : 4443 - 4450