When poor solubility becomes an issue: From early stage to proof of concept

Drug absorption, sufficient and reproducible bioavailability and/or pharmacokinetic profile in humans are recognized today as one of the major challenges in oral delivery of new drug substances. The issue arose especially when drug discovery and medicinal chemistry moved from wet chemistry to combin...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of pharmaceutical sciences 2007-08, Vol.31 (5), p.249-261
Hauptverfasser: Stegemann, S., Leveiller, F., Franchi, D., de Jong, H., Lindén, H.
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container_end_page 261
container_issue 5
container_start_page 249
container_title European journal of pharmaceutical sciences
container_volume 31
creator Stegemann, S.
Leveiller, F.
Franchi, D.
de Jong, H.
Lindén, H.
description Drug absorption, sufficient and reproducible bioavailability and/or pharmacokinetic profile in humans are recognized today as one of the major challenges in oral delivery of new drug substances. The issue arose especially when drug discovery and medicinal chemistry moved from wet chemistry to combinatorial chemistry and high throughput screening in the mid-1990s. Taking into account the drug product development times of 8–12 years, the apparent R&D productivity gap as determined by the number of products in late stage clinical development today, is the result of the drug discovery and formulation development in the late 1990s, which were the early and enthusiastic times of the combinatorial chemistry and high throughput screening. In parallel to implementation of these new technologies, tremendous knowledge has been accumulated on biological factors like transporters, metabolizing enzymes and efflux systems as well as on the physicochemical characteristics of the drug substances like crystal structures and salt formation impacting oral bioavailability. Research tools and technologies have been, are and will be developed to assess the impact of these factors on drug absorption for the new chemical entities. The conference focused specifically on the impact of compounds with poor solubility on analytical evaluation, prediction of oral absorption, substance selection, material and formulation strategies and development. The existing tools and technologies, their potential utilization throughout the drug development process and the directions for further research to overcome existing gaps and influence these drug characteristics were discussed in detail.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ejps.2007.05.110
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subjects Administration, Oral
Bioenhancement
Biological Availability
Combinatorial Chemistry Techniques - methods
Drug Design
Drug solubility
Formulation
Humans
Intestinal Absorption
Pharmaceutical Preparations - administration & dosage
Pharmaceutical Preparations - chemical synthesis
Pharmaceutical Preparations - chemistry
Pharmacokinetics
Poor water solubility
Solubility
title When poor solubility becomes an issue: From early stage to proof of concept
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