SIMPATHIC:通过利用临床和分子病理学的相似性来加速罕见疾病的药物再利用

IF 3.5 2区 生物学 Q2 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM Molecular genetics and metabolism Pub Date : 2025-04-01 Epub Date: 2025-03-01 DOI:10.1016/j.ymgme.2025.109073
Clara D.M. van Karnebeek , Annelieke R. Müller , Laura Benkemoun , Ibrahim Boussaad , Martina C. Cornel , Joanna IntHout , Martin de Kort , Sofia de Oliveira Martins , Alessandro Prigione , Tessel Rigter , Kit C.B. Roes , Anna Sanchez , Raymond Schipper , Mark D. Wilkinson , Peter A.C. ’t Hoen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

罕见病影响到全世界4亿多人,其中不到6%的疾病可获得批准的治疗方法。药物再利用是开发罕见病患者治疗方法的关键策略,这些患者有大量未满足的医疗需求。与新药开发相比,重新利用药物的过程是一种节省时间和成本效益的方法,可能导致更高的成功率。为了加速和确保罕见的神经代谢、神经和神经肌肉疾病的治疗开发的可持续性,一个国际临床和分子病理学联盟(SIMPATHIC)已经建立,我们从一种药物一种疾病的概念,转向一种药物靶向疾病之间共享的病理机制,应用平行的临床前和临床药物开发。在这里,联盟描述了联盟所追求的药物再利用加速,包括1)共同创造,2)患者授权,3)使用标准化的诱导多能干细胞(iPSC)衍生疾病模型和细胞和分子分析,4)神经元高通量药物筛选,5)创新临床试验设计,以及6)选择适当的开发和患者获取模型。通过这种方式,将为几种罕见疾病建立快速有效的药物再利用途径,以减少从发现到患者获得的时间。
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SIMPATHIC: Accelerating drug repurposing for rare diseases by exploiting SIMilarities in clinical and molecular PATHology
Rare diseases affect over 400 million people worldwide, with approved treatment available for less than 6 % of these diseases. Drug repurposing is a key strategy in the development of therapies for rare disease patients with large unmet medical needs. The process of repurposing drugs compared to novel drug development is a time-saving and cost-efficient method potentially resulting in higher success rates. To accelerate and ensure sustainability in therapy development for rare neurometabolic, neurological, and neuromuscular diseases, an international consortium SIMilarities in clinical and molecular PATHology (SIMPATHIC) has been established where we move away from the one drug one disease concept and move towards one drug targeting a pathomechanism shared between diseases, by applying parallel preclinical and clinical drug development. Here the consortium describes accelerators of drug repurposing pursued by the consortium, including 1) co-creation, 2) patient empowerment, 3) use of standardized induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived disease models and cellular and molecular profiling, 4) high-throughput drug screening in neurons, 5) innovative clinical trial design, and 6) selection of appropriate exploitation and patient access models. In this way, a fast and effective drug repurposing pathway for several rare diseases will be established to reduce time from discovery to patient access.
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来源期刊
Molecular genetics and metabolism
Molecular genetics and metabolism 生物-生化与分子生物学
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
7.90%
发文量
621
审稿时长
34 days
期刊介绍: Molecular Genetics and Metabolism contributes to the understanding of the metabolic and molecular basis of disease. This peer reviewed journal publishes articles describing investigations that use the tools of biochemical genetics and molecular genetics for studies of normal and disease states in humans and animal models.
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