Affiliation:
1. 27 Wodehouse Terrace, Falmouth, Cornwall TR11 3EN, UK
Abstract
The pharma Industry's ability to develop safe and effective new drugs to market is in serious decline.
Arguably, a major contributor to this is the Industry's extensive reliance on nonhuman biology-based test methods to determine potential
safety and efficacy, objective analysis of which reveals poor predictive value. An obvious alternative approach is to use human-based tests,
but only if they are available, practical, and effective. While in vivo (phase 0 microdosing with high sensitivity mass spectroscopy)
and in silico (using established human biological data), technologies are increasingly being used, in vitro human approaches
are more rarely employed. However, not only are increasingly sophisticated in vitro test methods now available or under development,
but the basic ethically approved infrastructure through which human cells and tissues may be acquired is established. Along with clinical microdosing
and in silico approaches, more effective access to and use of human cells and tissues in vitro provide exciting and potentially
more effective opportunities for the assessment of safety and efficacy of new medicines.
Cited by
4 articles.
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