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Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics utilizing unbound target tissue exposure as part of a disposition-based rationale for lead optimization of benzoxaboroles in the treatment of Stage 2 Human African Trypanosomiasis

This review presents a progression strategy for the discovery of new anti-parasitic drugs that uses in vitro susceptibility, time-kill and reversibility measures to define the therapeutically relevant exposure required in target tissues of animal infection models. The strategy is exemplified by the...

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Autores principales: WRING, STEPHEN, GAUKEL, ERIC, NARE, BAKELA, JACOBS, ROBERT, BEAUDET, BETH, BOWLING, TANA, MERCER, LUKE, BACCHI, CYRUS, YARLETT, NIGEL, RANDOLPH, RYAN, PARHAM, ROBIN, REWERTS, CINDY, PLATNER, JACOB, DON, ROBERT
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3884839/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24007596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S003118201300098X
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author WRING, STEPHEN
GAUKEL, ERIC
NARE, BAKELA
JACOBS, ROBERT
BEAUDET, BETH
BOWLING, TANA
MERCER, LUKE
BACCHI, CYRUS
YARLETT, NIGEL
RANDOLPH, RYAN
PARHAM, ROBIN
REWERTS, CINDY
PLATNER, JACOB
DON, ROBERT
author_facet WRING, STEPHEN
GAUKEL, ERIC
NARE, BAKELA
JACOBS, ROBERT
BEAUDET, BETH
BOWLING, TANA
MERCER, LUKE
BACCHI, CYRUS
YARLETT, NIGEL
RANDOLPH, RYAN
PARHAM, ROBIN
REWERTS, CINDY
PLATNER, JACOB
DON, ROBERT
author_sort WRING, STEPHEN
collection PubMed
description This review presents a progression strategy for the discovery of new anti-parasitic drugs that uses in vitro susceptibility, time-kill and reversibility measures to define the therapeutically relevant exposure required in target tissues of animal infection models. The strategy is exemplified by the discovery of SCYX-7158 as a potential oral treatment for stage 2 (CNS) Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT). A critique of current treatments for stage 2 HAT is included to provide context for the challenges of achieving target tissue disposition and the need for establishing pharmacokinetic–pharmacodynamic (PK–PD) measures early in the discovery paradigm. The strategy comprises 3 stages. Initially, compounds demonstrating promising in vitro activity and selectivity for the target organism over mammalian cells are advanced to in vitro metabolic stability, barrier permeability and tissue binding assays to establish that they will likely achieve and maintain therapeutic concentrations during in-life efficacy studies. Secondly, in vitro time-kill and reversibility kinetics are employed to correlate exposure (based on unbound concentrations) with in vitro activity, and to identify pharmacodynamic measures that would best predict efficacy. Lastly, this information is used to design dosing regimens for pivotal pharmacokinetic–pharmacodyamic studies in animal infection models.
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spelling pubmed-38848392014-01-08 Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics utilizing unbound target tissue exposure as part of a disposition-based rationale for lead optimization of benzoxaboroles in the treatment of Stage 2 Human African Trypanosomiasis WRING, STEPHEN GAUKEL, ERIC NARE, BAKELA JACOBS, ROBERT BEAUDET, BETH BOWLING, TANA MERCER, LUKE BACCHI, CYRUS YARLETT, NIGEL RANDOLPH, RYAN PARHAM, ROBIN REWERTS, CINDY PLATNER, JACOB DON, ROBERT Parasitology Research Article This review presents a progression strategy for the discovery of new anti-parasitic drugs that uses in vitro susceptibility, time-kill and reversibility measures to define the therapeutically relevant exposure required in target tissues of animal infection models. The strategy is exemplified by the discovery of SCYX-7158 as a potential oral treatment for stage 2 (CNS) Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT). A critique of current treatments for stage 2 HAT is included to provide context for the challenges of achieving target tissue disposition and the need for establishing pharmacokinetic–pharmacodynamic (PK–PD) measures early in the discovery paradigm. The strategy comprises 3 stages. Initially, compounds demonstrating promising in vitro activity and selectivity for the target organism over mammalian cells are advanced to in vitro metabolic stability, barrier permeability and tissue binding assays to establish that they will likely achieve and maintain therapeutic concentrations during in-life efficacy studies. Secondly, in vitro time-kill and reversibility kinetics are employed to correlate exposure (based on unbound concentrations) with in vitro activity, and to identify pharmacodynamic measures that would best predict efficacy. Lastly, this information is used to design dosing regimens for pivotal pharmacokinetic–pharmacodyamic studies in animal infection models. Cambridge University Press 2014-01 2013-09-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3884839/ /pubmed/24007596 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S003118201300098X Text en © Cambridge University Press 2013 The online version of this article is published within an Open Access environment subject to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Research Article
WRING, STEPHEN
GAUKEL, ERIC
NARE, BAKELA
JACOBS, ROBERT
BEAUDET, BETH
BOWLING, TANA
MERCER, LUKE
BACCHI, CYRUS
YARLETT, NIGEL
RANDOLPH, RYAN
PARHAM, ROBIN
REWERTS, CINDY
PLATNER, JACOB
DON, ROBERT
Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics utilizing unbound target tissue exposure as part of a disposition-based rationale for lead optimization of benzoxaboroles in the treatment of Stage 2 Human African Trypanosomiasis
title Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics utilizing unbound target tissue exposure as part of a disposition-based rationale for lead optimization of benzoxaboroles in the treatment of Stage 2 Human African Trypanosomiasis
title_full Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics utilizing unbound target tissue exposure as part of a disposition-based rationale for lead optimization of benzoxaboroles in the treatment of Stage 2 Human African Trypanosomiasis
title_fullStr Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics utilizing unbound target tissue exposure as part of a disposition-based rationale for lead optimization of benzoxaboroles in the treatment of Stage 2 Human African Trypanosomiasis
title_full_unstemmed Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics utilizing unbound target tissue exposure as part of a disposition-based rationale for lead optimization of benzoxaboroles in the treatment of Stage 2 Human African Trypanosomiasis
title_short Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics utilizing unbound target tissue exposure as part of a disposition-based rationale for lead optimization of benzoxaboroles in the treatment of Stage 2 Human African Trypanosomiasis
title_sort pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics utilizing unbound target tissue exposure as part of a disposition-based rationale for lead optimization of benzoxaboroles in the treatment of stage 2 human african trypanosomiasis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3884839/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24007596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S003118201300098X
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