Developing New Medicines

Cards (12)

  • Discovery of Potential New Medicines:
    • Traditionally, drugs were extracted from plants and microorganisms
    • New drugs are being developed all the time by scientists at universities and drug companies around the world
    • Sophisticated computer modelling is done to identify 'candidate' molecules
    • Candidates are synthetic compounds that could be manufactured and could have the same or similar therapeutic effect on disease as existing drug compounds
  • Discovery of Potential New Medicines:
    • A lot of the medication that we use today are based on chemicals extracted from plants
    • The heart drug digitalis originates from foxgloves
    • The painkiller aspirin originates from willow
    • Penicillin was discovered by Alexander Fleming from the Penicillium mould (a fungus)
    • Fleming left some petri dishes that had been contaminated with mould from the air and found that bacteria would not grow near the mould
    • He discovered that the mould (Penicillium notatum) was releasing a chemical (penicillin) that killed the bacteria surrounding it
  • Discovery of Potential New Medicines:
    • Most new drugs are synthesised by chemists in the pharmaceutical industry
    • However, the starting point may still be a chemical extracted from a plant
  • Drugs From Plants Table:
  • Testing of Potential New Medicines:
    • All new drugs need to be tested and trialled before they can be used in patients
    • They are tested for:
    • Toxicity – does it have harmful side effects?
    • Efficacy – does the drug work?
    • Dose – what dose is the lowest that can be used and still have an effect?
    • The results of any testing are then peer-reviewed to make sure that the results are described accurately. The results would then be published in journals
  • Developing new drugs and medicines:
    • Once a candidate drug has been identified and synthesised, preclinical testing is done in a laboratory using cells, tissues and live animals
    • Clinical trials use healthy volunteers and patients
    • Very low doses of the drug are given at the start of the clinical trial
    • If the drug is found to be safe, further clinical trials are carried out to find the optimum dose for the drug
    • Developing new drugs and medicines:In double-blind trials, some patients are given a placebo
    • Double-blind means that the doctors/nurses in direct contact with the trial patients are not aware of whether that patient is receiving the active drug or the placebo
    • This is controlled by other people who do not see the patients
    • This removes the chance of a doctor/ nurse influencing a patient unintentionally and displaying bias
  • The three stages of drug development:
    Preclinical testing-
    • The drug is tested on cells in the lab
    • Computer models may also be used to simulate the metabolic pathways that may be taken by the drug
    • Efficacy (how effective the drug is as a therapy) and toxicity (harmful side effects) are tested at this stage
  • The three stages of drug development:
    Whole organism testing
    • The drug is tested on animals to see the effect on a whole organism – all new medicines in the UK have to have tests on 2 different animals by law
    • Efficacy, toxicity and dosage are tested at this stage
    • The effect on unborn foetuses has to be assessed
  • The three stages of drug development:
    Clinical trials
    • The drug is tested on human volunteers first, generally with a very low dose then increased
    • This is to make sure it is safe in a body that is working normally
    • The next stage is to test on patients with the condition
    • The patients are often split into two groups; one given the active drug the other given a placebo
    • This is called a double-blind study; neither the doctor nor the patient knows if the patient is getting the placebo or the active drug
  • The three stages of drug development:
    • Once the drug is found to be safe then the lowest effective dose is tested at this stage
  • The three stages of drug development:
    Future medications-
    • Pharmaceutical companies are always looking to find new medications
    • These include:
    • Vaccinations to different diseases
    • Antibiotics that have a different action on the bacteria, so that bacteria are not resistant to them
    • Painkillers with fewer side effects
    • Antiviral drugs that don't damage the body's tissues
    • Sources of these medications may be plants or microorganisms