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The Basics of Drug Development Science Nothing to be scared of! Or Which Way to the Clinic? IRMA Webinar September 28, 2010 Jim A. Turpin, Ph. D. Preclinical Team Leader Topical Microbicide Branch Prevention Science Program NIAID, Division of AIDS, DHHS/NIH Required Disclaimer The views expressed are those of the presenter and do not necessarily reflect the official policies of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), nor does mention of trade names, commercial practices, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Today's talk Touch on the following : What is drug development? Basic Science behind drug development Will use prevention and microbicides as a context for discussion Everything I say can be applied to other drug development efforts with appropriate modifications A complex process but will take the 20,000 ft view DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Definition Lead or Candidate A compound or proposed new chemical entity (NCE) with properties or characteristics that make it appropriate for further development The terms can be applied interchangeably to any stage of the drug development process Emphasize that a selection (elimination) has occurred DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS In a Nutshell What is drug development? Identifying candidates/leads for clinical testing that will improve health or meet a medical need To accomplish this we must integrate and balance: Scientific knowledge FDA Requirements DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Drug Development: Opposing Forces 1 or 2 100,000 To 1,000,000 Number of Compounds I Discovery Preclinical Virology $.01 to $1.00 DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Preclinical Studies (Critical Path) II III Clinical Studies Cost of Development Per Compound Deployment $ millions Drug Development : Thy Name is Attrition FACTOIDS Average time from Discovery to Phase III trials : 12 years Probabilities of Success Discovery to Clinical Testing: ~11 % Initial lead identification, i.e. screen random library Chances of success ~ 1: 10,000 that a compound will go to clinical testing Can raise to 1:100 to 1:1000 if working on a series of compounds Clinical testing: 38% drop out in Phase I 60% percent drop out in Phase II 40% fail in Phase III Of successful Phase III candidates only 23% are approved as drugs by the FDA DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Where Do We Lose Candidates/Leads? Ismail Kola & John Landis Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 3, 711-716 (August 2004) DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Drug Development and the Pipeline Concept Everyone talks about pipelines --Adjectives galore: robust, vibrant, sustainable A pipeline is a way to describe and conceptualize a drug development process involving many candidates/leads DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Pipelines are Defined by Their Goal Microbicides as the Example Must protect healthy and HIV infected men and women when used vaginally, penile and/or rectally without harm Harm= any effect that increases infection susceptibility or changes disease course for the worse, directly or indirectly May be used episodically or continually by individuals for decades Drug development strategy is used to identify suitable compounds to meet the above requirements proactively and efficiently to create a sustainable effort that: Generates new candidates/leads Eliminates the unsuitable DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS The Drug Development Pipeline Example: Microbicide Development Preclinical Virology Discovery Preclinical Studies (Critical Path) Pilot Studies I II Clinical Studies III Deployment Product recycled In Pipeline Product Recycled Into Discovery Successful Microbicide Or Microbicide Strategy LEAD Lead Identification And Optimization Product Eliminated DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Drug Development Multiple activities driven by Milestones that may occur sequentially or simultaneously Gantt Charts—A Tool of Industry 2 1 Preclinical Virology 4 3 5 6 Years 7 8 9 10 S Formulation S Pre/generic Formulation Optimized Formulation Manufacturing S Analytical Method Development GMP Production Clinical Batches Pre Clinical Studies S (Acute Toxicology etc.) Additional Toxicity studies S (Chronic Toc. , Repo. Etc.) Pre IND /IND S Clinical Trial Activities Protocol Development Phase I S Phase II S Phase III S S DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS GO/NO GO Decisions Intermediate GO/NO-GO Decisions Drug Development and Pipelines are not Uni-Dimensional Primary Path Discovery Iterative Screen Time Targeted Expansion Path Library of Compounds >100,000 to 1,000,000 Lead Expansion Path Successful New Target Failure Library of Compounds >100,000 to 1,000,000 1000 100 New Limited Synthesis 10 1000 Clinical Preclinical Lead(s) Toxicology Pharmacology Formulation Manufacturing Phase I Phase II Phase III Phase IV Product 100 Lead(s) Toxicology Pharmacology Formulation Manufacturing Phase I Phase II Phase III Phase IV Product 10 Lead(s) Toxicology Pharmacology Formulation Manufacturing Phase I Phase II Phase III Phase IV Product DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS 100 10 10 Lead(s) Lead(s) Toxicology Pharmacology X Toxicology Pharmacology Formulation Manufacturing Phase I Phase II Phase III Phase IV Product The Challenge of the Basic Science of Drug Development is Finding the right needle in the right hay stack And once it is found confirming the needle you found is the one you were looking for Doing all of this in sustainable fashion DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS The Foundation of Drug Development is: Scientific knowledge We must understand the disease to be able to find candidates/leads to prevent or treat it DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS HIV drug development has to account for: What we do not know In HIV Infection 1. What form of the virus infects? 1. Cell –free 2. Cell-associated 3. Both 2. How does virus get to its target cells? 1. Micro-trauma 2. Translocation 3. Permeation 4. Cell capture 3. What is the first cell infected? DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS HIV drug development must also account for: What we think we know The data, models and observations we use to describe the process of HIV transmission and infection are subject to change as we learn more DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS HIV Replication Cycle and Prevention Targets Other Membrane targets Rafts, lipids, etc. Entry X Coreceptor Attachment X Infectivity X X X Integrase RNA Integration Translation Transcription Protease Genomic RNA Pr 160 gag/pol Pr55gag gp120/gp41 Immature Virion DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Reverse Transcription APOBEC 3G Trim 5a gp160 Target Tissues Female Genital Tract Cervix Uterus GI Tract Anus Vagina Rectum Introitus Transition Zone DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Colon Transition Zone Endocervix Ectocervix Microbicides Duration of Effectiveness? Point of no return? Haase Nature Reviews 2010 464:217 DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Complex Microenvironment 1. Mucous 5. Innate defenses 2. pH 6. Target cell activation 3. Osmolarity 7. Distribution and coverage 4. Microbiota Hendrix et al. Ann,. Rev. Pharmacol. Toxicol. 2009 49:349 DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS How do we decide what testing to do? DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS First must ask: What Are the Optimal “Drug” Characteristics of a Candidate/Lead? 1. Ultimately driven by regulatory requirements to conduct clinical trials 2. FDA enforces regulations and provides guidance 3. No FDA guidance specific to microbicides 4. Most relevant FDA preclinical guidance is for antivirals: Guidance for Industry Antiviral Product Development http://www.fda.gov/OHRMS/DOCKETS/98fr/05d-0183-gdl0002-01.pdf 5. The needed properties can be divided into 4 general categories 1. Safety 3. Acceptability 2. Efficacy 4. Feasibility/Delivery DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Selected Properties of an Ideal Topical Microbicide (FDA guidance) Safety Efficacy Acceptability Feasibility/Delivery • • • • • low in vitro toxicity and no systemic toxicity Efficacy, In vitro --- In vivo (?) Easily formulated and stable under likely storage conditions Active in semen/seminal, cervicovaginal and rectal secretions Low systemic uptake • GMP and industrial scale production compatible • Lack of effect on the microbiota: Lactobaclli • Compatible with rectal use • Acceptable to user • Color, odor and taste compatible • Overall ease of use- negotiable • Does not negatively impact intercourse • Compatible with condoms and other mechanical barriers DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS How do you Guidance into Drug Development? The Role of the Algorithm Algorithm: A set of rules or steps that results in achieving the right answer in the shortest period of time Algorithms and the Basic Science of Drug Development 1. Use best assays to pick the best candidates/leads 2. Basic Science driven 3. May include approaches to address gaps in knowledge 4. In Prevention---everyone has one 5. Tailored to the objectives and goals of the individual drug development program DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Finding Candidates/Leads: NIAID Screening Algorithm Objective: Proof-of –feasibility as a proposed microbicide candidate Primary Assays CD4-dependent CCR5-tropic 1) Cell-associated HIV-1 transmission assay 2) Cell-free HIV-1 entry assay TI <10 (colorless compound) or TI <50 (colored compound) Stop testing TI >10 (colorless) or >50 (colored) TI <10 (colorless compound) or TI <50 (colored compound) Confirmatory Assays Repeat of primary assays for confirmation of results Stop testing TI >10 (colorless) or >50 (colored) Secondary Mechanistic Assays 2) CD4-dependent CXCR4-tropic assays a) HIV-1 cell-associated transmission assay 1) CD4-dependent CCR5-tropic fusion assay b) HIV-1 entry assay c) HIV-1 fusion assay 3) CD4-independent (ME-180) assay Most highly ranked compounds Specialized Assays 1) 2) 3) 4) Human cervical explant model Human PBMC clade panel testing Combination drug assays Specialized toxicity assays (Vybrant™ and LIVE/DEAD®) DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2008 52:1768-81. Algorithms Addressing FDA Requirements CONRAD Algorithm IPM Algorithm Courtesy of Gustavo Doncel Courtesy of Joe Romano Preclinical Testing Algorithm for Multi-Purpose Drug Candidates Compound CV Safety Efficacy HIV In vitro • X4/R5, CF/CA, LA/CI, clades • Cell lines, pri cells, explants • Env factors (pH, SP, CVS, F) • Resistance Animal Models • Humanized mice • NHP (S/M Dose) Other STPs In Vitro / Ex vivo Models • FRT epithelial cells • Immune cells • CV explants • Lactobacilli Endpoints • Cell viability and multiplication • Epithelial integrity/permeability • Inflammatory mediators • Innate factors and antiviral activity • Enhancement of infection • HD, TV, CA, BV Animal Models • HSV, CT, NG Contraception & Other Repro Health Benefits In vitro • Sperm viab, motil, function Animals Models • Rabbit/monkey In Vitro Models • Epithelial cell monolayer • Dual chamber/explant Endpoints • Absorption • [API/active metabolite] • Inhibition of target Animal Testing In vitro • HSV, CT, NG Pharmacokinetics / Pharmacodynamics Animal Testing Models • Refined RVI • Mouse safety/HSV susceptibility • NHP Endpoints • Histopathology • Epithelial integrity • Inflammation • Immune response • Enhancement of infection DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Models • Rabbit, rodent, NHP – PK alone or w/ safety – PK + efficacy (ex vivo/in vivo) Endpoints • [Drug] in CV mucosa, plasma, CVS • [Active metab] in target cells • Inhibition of target/infection • ADME Common Themes? Safety and Activity Safety- In vitro cytotoxicity Activity---Efficacy Effect in Ex Vivo Tissue Model (Explants)--Safety and Efficacy Animal Model--Efficacy FDA required testing—Safety (Critical Path) DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Tenofovir (TFV, PMPA) NRTI UC781 NNRTI Dapivirine (TMC120) NNRTI Lets Develop a Microbicide Candidate! VivaGel™ (SPL7013) Entry DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Maraviroc CCR5 Microbicide Candidate? Safety- In vitro Cytotoxicity – Safety = cytotoxicity--Usually determined simultaneously with efficacy – General guidelines (any cytotoxicity is a concern) • No toxicity Cell lines, Primary cells, i.e. PBMCs • No toxicity on genital and GI epithelial cells • No toxicity to endogenous H2O2 producing Lactobacilli DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Microbicide Candidate? Activity in: • General anti-HIV activity • Is the mechanism of action compatible with microbicide use? • Effect of: • Cervical mucous/secretions and/or GI and secretions • Semen/Seminal fluid • Environmental pH • Inhibits multiple HIV clades/subtypes of virus • Resistance • How quickly generate • Effect on antiviral activity • Cross Resistance • Severity • Combinations with other candidates or drugs DHHS/NIH/NIAID Microbicide Candidate? • Effect in Ex Vivo Tissue Model – First chance for tissue exposure to unformulated or formulated microbicide • Toxicity – Metabolic viability—MTT assay – Histology • Activity Tissue on support matrix – Inhibition of HIV replication Microbicide Virus Wash DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Microbicide Candidate? • Animal model testing (efficacy) • Humanized mice • NHP •Role of efficacy • Researcher--argument for “Biological Plausibility” • FDA--optional but preferred to be active DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Microbicide Candidate? SAFETY: The Critical Path Studies required by FDA International Conference on Harmonization (ICH) guidance are also used Goal of the Critical Path: Prepare for testing in humans by looking for any issues that will affect safety and/or feasibility DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Critical Path: Translation from Preclinical to Clinical Testing? Preclinical Studies General Preclinical Virology Antiviral activity Toxicity Cell lines/Primary cells Range of Action--Subtypes Mechanism of Action Resistance Combination Relevant Matrices Preformulation ↓GLP Lab Effect on Lactobacilli Effect of Matrices –Seminal Plasma –Cervical fluid –Mucin Other STIs Cervical Explants NHP iVag transmission Rabbit Vaginal/Rectal Irritation testing Systemic Absorption by iVag or iR. Penile Irritation Chemistry Manufacturing and Control (CMC) Must be carried out in accordance with the CFR for GLP and GMP studies GMP Unformulated Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient (API) DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS PK and Toxicology GLP Condom Compatibility GLP Animal GLP Formulation Stability Sterility Release Microbicide Specific Formulated Gel or Ring Stability, Sterility, Purity, Packaging Systemic Absorbance? iVag. or iR. . Yes No Genotoxicity Acute Toxicity Maximum tolerated dose (MTD) Chronic Toxicity, 90+ days PK and Metabolites (ADME) Carcinogenesis Reproductive toxicology –Seg. I Reproductive performance –Seg. II Teratology –Seg. III Perinatal/Post natal Dermal/systemic Hypersensitivity Dermal/ systemic Photosensitivity Others, if applicable-Lung, CNS, Heart etc. Applicator GMP Selection Compatibility Acceptability Filling Take Home Messages Drug development is a process The process is controlled by multiple factors • FDA regulations and guidances • Basic science of HIV infection • Evolving knowledge of what might work The basic science of drug development is a process to select the candidate(s) with the best chance of success DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS AND FINALLY: Jim Turpin’s slightly twisted final thoughts on the Basic Science of Drug Development A challenge --not for the faint-hearted Must embrace the Zen of Candidate Reduction It is never too early or late to eliminate a candidate and if you do-- kill it dead---put a stake through its heart, and bury it at midnight at a crossroads –No Regrets Allowed The process is ever evolving—flexibility of mind is good! Seems complicated but the roadmap is there, just gotta follow it Sometimes its one of the most rewarding things you can do because it can change the world DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS Thank You Questions? Timbuk3 –The future is so bright I gotta wear shades! DHHS/NIH/NIAID/DAIDS