English
 
Help Privacy Policy Disclaimer
  Advanced SearchBrowse

Item

ITEM ACTIONSEXPORT
  Virtual Clinical Trials, an Essential Step in Increasing the Effectiveness of the Drug Development Process.

Lehrach, H. (2015). Virtual Clinical Trials, an Essential Step in Increasing the Effectiveness of the Drug Development Process. Public Health Genomics, 18(6), 366-371.

Item is

Files

show Files
hide Files
:
Lehrach.pdf (Publisher version), 252KB
Name:
Lehrach.pdf
Description:
Editor's Choice - Free Access
OA-Status:
Visibility:
Public
MIME-Type / Checksum:
application/pdf / [MD5]
Technical Metadata:
Copyright Date:
2015-12-01
Copyright Info:
© 2015 S. Karger AG, Basel
License:
-

Locators

show

Creators

show
hide
 Creators:
Lehrach, Hans1, Author           
Affiliations:
1Dept. of Vertebrate Genomics (Head: Hans Lehrach), Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Max Planck Society, ou_1433550              

Content

show
hide
Free keywords: Drug discovery; Drug development; Predictive modelling; In silico clinical trials; Virtual patient; Mechanistic models; Personalised medicine
 Abstract: Every patient is different - his/her genomes, environment, disease history and exposure to drugs. Tumours, in particular, are often heterogeneous in their genetic make-up and their response to drugs, both within and between samples. Classic clinical trials basically ignore this complexity or, as in stratified medicine, attempt to reduce it to an analysis of a small number of still enormously heterogeneous patient groups. Medicine, however, is not the only area in which we are faced with such complex ‘n = 1' (every individual case is different) situations. The weather we experience today, characterised by tens of terabytes of measurement data, has never occurred before and will never occur again. Similar to the situation in medicine, we cannot predict the development of today's weather by looking for identical weather conditions in the past, and we cannot, in real life, test drugs for every individual patient in clinical trials with large numbers of biologically identical patient replicas. We can, however, do it with the help of models duplicating the ‘n = 1' situation on the computer, an approach which will also have to be used in both patient treatment and prevention as well as drug development in the future if we do not want to continue to make dangerous and expensive mistakes in real life.

Details

show
hide
Language(s): eng - English
 Dates: 2015-11-05
 Publication Status: Published online
 Pages: 6
 Publishing info: -
 Table of Contents: -
 Rev. Type: -
 Identifiers: -
 Degree: -

Event

show

Legal Case

show

Project information

show

Source 1

show
hide
Title: Public Health Genomics
Source Genre: Journal
 Creator(s):
Affiliations:
Publ. Info: Basel : Karger
Pages: 6 Volume / Issue: 18 (6) Sequence Number: - Start / End Page: 366 - 371 Identifier: DOI: 10.1159/000441553