| Term 
 
        | what are the general steps in new drug synthesis |  | Definition 
 
        | discovery and synthesis of new molecule 
 in vitro studies determine effective dose
 
 animal testing
 
 IND
 
 clinical trials (3 phases)
 
 data gathering phase
 
 approval
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        | Term 
 
        | what is the information gathered for pre-clinical safety and toxicity (8) |  | Definition 
 
        | acute toxicity subacute toxicity
 chronic toxicity
 effects on reproduction: cellular and behavorial
 carcinogenicity: 2 years looking into prolonged use
 mutagenicity: effect on genetically stable bacteria or mammal cell culture
 investigaive toxicology: determine MOA of toxic actions
 quantative estimates
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | efects of large single dose up to lethal dose. max tolerated dose |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | effects of multiple doses over time in ratio to the expected clinical duration |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | what are the wuantative estimates in teh pre-clinical safety and toxicity assessment |  | Definition 
 
        | no-effect dose: max dose at which toxic effect is not seen 
 minimal leathl dose: smallest dose that is observed to kill any animal
 
 median lethal dose (LD50): dose tha tkills approx 50% of animals
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        | Term 
 
        | what are limitations during the pre-clinical safety and toxicity testing |  | Definition 
 
        | toxicity testing is time consuming and expensive large numbers of animals are used which is mean
 extrapolation of toxicity from all species tested has a high perdictive value to statistical reasons, rare adverse effects are unlikley to be detected
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        | Term 
 
        | what drug testing design must be used for human approval, explain it |  | Definition 
 
        | crossover: alternating periods of administration of test drug, placebo, and standard treatment |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | how must human test subjects be chosen |  | Definition 
 
        | large enough population over sufficient period of time 
 presence of other diseases and lifetyle choices can affect the study so you have to randomize
 
 minimize subject and observer bias and weed out placebo effect results. double blind can help this out
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        | Term 
 
        | what does the FDA mandate about drugs, what is concerning about this |  | Definition 
 
        | drugs must be safe and effective 
 safe means different things to doc, patient, and society. complete absence of risk is impossible
 
 public assumes FDA approval means free of serious or all side effects
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        | Term 
 
        | what is IND, when does it happen, what must be done by this point |  | Definition 
 
        | new drug is ready for trial in humans and must be filed with the FDA 
 need acute and subacute animal toxicity studies
 
 chronic safety testing can be done in animals and humans at the same time
 
 volunteers and patients informed of status of drugs and risk and be allowed to decline at any time
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        | Term 
 
        | what happens in clinical trial phase 1, what is the goal |  | Definition 
 
        | effect of drug dose in a small number of healthy volunteers unless drug has a toxic risk (then use sick volunteers) non-blind 
 determine if humans and animals have the same response, show perdictable toxicities
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        | Term 
 
        | what are the chances of getting past clinical trial phase 1 |  | Definition 
 
        | you can usually find a non toxic dose so pretty good |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | what happens in phase 2, how is it done, what is the goal |  | Definition 
 
        | drug is studied in a small number of patients with the disease to determine EFFICACy 
 single bind with placebo or older active drug usually in a university hospital
 
 find a broader range of toxicities
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        | Term 
 
        | what are the chances of getting past clinical trial phase 2 |  | Definition 
 
        | not so much most drugs fail here |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | what happens in clinical trial phase 3, how is it done |  | Definition 
 
        | evaluation of a large population to judge safety and efficacy 
 double blind cross over study performed in the natural setting for the drug future use
 
 goal is to have success and get permission to market in a controlled setting
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        | Term 
 
        | what happens in clinical trial phase 4, what is the goal |  | Definition 
 
        | begins after marketing approval postmarking surveillance program
 important side effects at incidence f 1:10,000 or less are formed
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        | Term 
 
        | what are the considerations when evaluating a clinical drug study |  | Definition 
 
        | ethical considerations: adequate safegaurds, proper concent 
 statement of objectives: what are they? are they clear?
 
 experimental methods: were they ok? were they sensitive?
 
 statistical methods: how were patients selected? were placebo positive controls used?
 
 conclusions: does the data justify them? does the drug have a cost, efficacy, or safety advantage over the old drug?
 
 look at peer reviews
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        | Term 
 
        | define an orphan drug, what is the problem, how  was it fixed |  | Definition 
 
        | drugs for rare diseasees 
 difficult to research, develop, and market
 
 kids diseases, not as cost effective, less people buying the drug, pathology gets little attention
 
 orphan act is incentive to develope these drugs
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | required when drug is intened for prolonged use. tested for 2 years |  | 
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