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Discovery and preclinical development of new antibiotics

Antibiotics are the medical wonder of our age, but an increasing frequency of resistance among key pathogens is rendering them less effective. If this trend continues the consequences for cancer patients, organ transplant patients, and indeed the general community could be disastrous. The problem is...

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Autores principales: Hughes, Diarmaid, Karlén, Anders
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Informa Healthcare 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4034554/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24646082
http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/03009734.2014.896437
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author Hughes, Diarmaid
Karlén, Anders
author_facet Hughes, Diarmaid
Karlén, Anders
author_sort Hughes, Diarmaid
collection PubMed
description Antibiotics are the medical wonder of our age, but an increasing frequency of resistance among key pathogens is rendering them less effective. If this trend continues the consequences for cancer patients, organ transplant patients, and indeed the general community could be disastrous. The problem is complex, involving abuse and overuse of antibiotics (selecting for an increasing frequency of resistant bacteria), together with a lack of investment in discovery and development (resulting in an almost dry drug development pipeline). Remedial approaches to the problem should include taking measures to reduce the selective pressures for resistance development, and taking measures to incentivize renewed investment in antibiotic discovery and development. Bringing new antibiotics to the clinic is critical because this is currently the only realistic therapy that can ensure the level of infection control required for many medical procedures. Here we outline the complex process involved in taking a potential novel antibiotic from the initial discovery of a hit molecule, through lead and candidate drug development, up to its entry into phase I clinical trials. The stringent criteria that a successful drug must meet, balancing high efficacy in vivo against a broad spectrum of pathogens, with minimal liabilities against human targets, explain why even with sufficient investment this process is prone to a high failure rate. This emphasizes the need to create a well-funded antibiotic discovery and development pipeline that can sustain the continuous delivery of novel candidate drugs into clinical trials, to ensure the maintenance of the advanced medical procedures we currently take for granted.
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spelling pubmed-40345542014-06-18 Discovery and preclinical development of new antibiotics Hughes, Diarmaid Karlén, Anders Ups J Med Sci Review Article Antibiotics are the medical wonder of our age, but an increasing frequency of resistance among key pathogens is rendering them less effective. If this trend continues the consequences for cancer patients, organ transplant patients, and indeed the general community could be disastrous. The problem is complex, involving abuse and overuse of antibiotics (selecting for an increasing frequency of resistant bacteria), together with a lack of investment in discovery and development (resulting in an almost dry drug development pipeline). Remedial approaches to the problem should include taking measures to reduce the selective pressures for resistance development, and taking measures to incentivize renewed investment in antibiotic discovery and development. Bringing new antibiotics to the clinic is critical because this is currently the only realistic therapy that can ensure the level of infection control required for many medical procedures. Here we outline the complex process involved in taking a potential novel antibiotic from the initial discovery of a hit molecule, through lead and candidate drug development, up to its entry into phase I clinical trials. The stringent criteria that a successful drug must meet, balancing high efficacy in vivo against a broad spectrum of pathogens, with minimal liabilities against human targets, explain why even with sufficient investment this process is prone to a high failure rate. This emphasizes the need to create a well-funded antibiotic discovery and development pipeline that can sustain the continuous delivery of novel candidate drugs into clinical trials, to ensure the maintenance of the advanced medical procedures we currently take for granted. Informa Healthcare 2014-05 2014-05-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4034554/ /pubmed/24646082 http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/03009734.2014.896437 Text en © Informa Healthcare http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY-NC-ND 3.0 License which permits users to download and share the article for non-commercial purposes, so long as the article is reproduced in the whole without changes, and provided the original source is credited.
spellingShingle Review Article
Hughes, Diarmaid
Karlén, Anders
Discovery and preclinical development of new antibiotics
title Discovery and preclinical development of new antibiotics
title_full Discovery and preclinical development of new antibiotics
title_fullStr Discovery and preclinical development of new antibiotics
title_full_unstemmed Discovery and preclinical development of new antibiotics
title_short Discovery and preclinical development of new antibiotics
title_sort discovery and preclinical development of new antibiotics
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4034554/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24646082
http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/03009734.2014.896437
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