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Big physics, small doses: the use of AMS and PET in human microdosing of development drugs

Version 2 2024-03-13, 09:18
Version 1 2023-10-20, 10:08
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-13, 09:18 authored by Graham Lappin, R. Colin Garner
<p>The process of early clinical drug development has changed little over the past 20 years despite an up to 40 failure rate associated with inappropriate drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics of candidate molecules. A new method of obtaining human metabolism data known as microdosing has been developed which will permit smarter candidate selection by taking investigational drugs into humans earlier. Microdosing depends on the availability of two ultrasensitive 'big-physics' techniques: positron emission tomography (PET) can provide pharmacodynamic information, whereas accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) provides pharmacokinetic information. Microdosing allows safer human studies as well as reducing the use of animals in preclinical toxicology.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Pharmacy (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Nature Reviews Drug Discovery

Volume

2

Issue

3

Pages/Article Number

233-240

Publisher

Nature Publishing

ISSN

1474-1776

eISSN

1474-1784

Date Submitted

2013-03-23

Date Accepted

2013-03-23

Date of First Publication

2013-03-23

Date of Final Publication

2013-03-23

ePrints ID

8244