Pharmacogenomics in Drug Development FDA Science Board April 9, 2003 Brian B. Spear, Ph.D. Director, Pharmacogenomics Abbott Laboratories.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Drug Discovery Process
Advertisements

Presentation for HL7 RCRIM and Clinical Genomics SIG HL7 Working Group Meeting San Diego, CA 21Jan2004.
Regulation of Consumer Tests in California AAAS Meeting June 1-2, 2009 Beatrice OKeefe Acting Chief, Laboratory Field Services California Department of.
Taking Research and Development to the Clinic: Issues for Physicians AAAS/FDLI Colloquium I Diagnostics and Diagnoses Paths to Personalized Medicine Howard.
1 WORKSHOP 4: KEY COMMENTS FROM THE PANEL DISCUSSION The 3rd Kitasato University - Harvard School of Public Health Symposium Wednesday October 2nd - Thursday.
CZ5225 Methods in Computational Biology Lecture 9: Pharmacogenetics and individual variation of drug response CZ5225 Methods in Computational Biology.
FDA Pharmacogenetic Labels A Clinical Perspective David A Flockhart MD, PhD Indiana University School of Medicine Clinical Pharmacology Subcommittee of.
The Statisticians Role in Pharmaceutical Development
Integrative Organs Systems Scientists and Drug Discovery: The Link Between Big Pharma and Academia Glenn A. Reinhart, Ph.D. Senior Group Leader Integrative.
Clinical Trial Designs for the Evaluation of Prognostic & Predictive Classifiers Richard Simon, D.Sc. Chief, Biometric Research Branch National Cancer.
1 Pharmaceutical Challenges for the Semantic Web.
Clinical Trials — A Closer Look. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is the main consumer watchdog for numerous products: Drugs and biologics (prescription.
The Role of Human Genetics in Drug Discovery
Recursive Partitioning Method on Survival Outcomes for Personalized Medicine 2nd International Conference on Predictive, Preventive and Personalized Medicine.
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Critical Path.
The ICH E5 Question and Answer Document Status and Content Robert T. O’Neill, Ph.D. Director, Office of Biostatistics, CDER, FDA Presented at the 4th Kitasato-Harvard.
The Application of the Scientific Method: Preclinical Trials Copyright PEER.tamu.edu.
What Do Toxicologists Do?
Pharmaceutical Development and Review Process Rev. 10/21/2014 APGO Interaction with Industry: A Medical Student Guide.
Stefan Franzén Introduction to clinical trials.
+ Drug Development and Review Process. + Objectives Learn the processes involved in drug discovery and development Define the phases involved in FDA drug.
Biomedical research methods. What are biomedical research methods? An integrated approach using chemical, mathematical and computer simulations, in vitro.
Research & Innovation Horizon societal challenge 1 Open Info Day Funding Opportunities for SMEs Horizon 2020 "Health, demographic change and wellbeing"
Pharmacogenomics and personalized medicines Jean-Marie Boeynaems
Stages of drug development
JumpStart the Regulatory Review: Applying the Right Tools at the Right Time to the Right Audience Lilliam Rosario, Ph.D. Director Office of Computational.
Integrating Scientific Advances into Regulation: Pharmacogenomics and Pharmacogenetics Janet Woodcock, M.D. Director, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.
Introduction to Basic Science Emily L. Lowe, Ph.D. Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics UCLA.
Richard D. Hockett, Jr. M.D. Sr. Clinical Research Physician Group Leader, Genomic Medicine FDA Clinical Pharmacology Advisory Committee Integrating Pharmacogenomics.
Stefan Franzén Introduction to clinical trials.
A substance used in the diagnosis, treatment, or prevention of a disease or as a component of a medication A substance used in the diagnosis, treatment,
The Accelerating Pace of Medical Development and Challenges in Evaluating Benefit and Risk Alasdair Breckenridge Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory.
From the Lab to Market Unit 3.04 Understanding Biotechnology research & Development.
Clinical Pharmacy Part 2
Clinical Trial Designs An Overview. Identify: condition(s) of interest, intended population, planned treatment protocols Recruitment of volunteers: volunteers.
Biomedical Research Objective 2 Biomedical Research Methods.
Biomedical Research.
Investigational Drugs in the hospital. + What is Investigational Drug? Investigational or experimental drugs are new drugs that have not yet been approved.
Update From FDA: Office of the Commissioner and Center for Drug Evaluation and Research Janet Woodcock, M.D. Acting Deputy Commissioner for Operations.
The Value of Tissue Banks to Drug and Dx Developers Barbara L. Handelin, Ph.D. Conflicts of Interest, Privacy/Confidentiality, and Tissue Repositories:
Pharmacogenetics & Pharmacogenomics Personalized Medicine.
More than 90% compounds entering clinical trials fail to demonstrate safety and efficacy in human, despite evidence of safety and effectiveness in pre-
Proposal for End-of-Phase 2A (EOP2A) Meetings Advisory Committee for Pharmaceutical Sciences Clinical Pharmacology Subcommittee November 17-18, 2003 Lawrence.
Developing medicines for the future and why it is challenging Angela Milne.
Personalized Medicine Dr. M. Jawad Hassan. Personalized Medicine Human Genome and SNPs What is personalized medicine? Pharmacogenetics Case study – warfarin.
The Use of Predictive Biomarkers in Clinical Trial Design Richard Simon, D.Sc. Chief, Biometric Research Branch National Cancer Institute
The New Drug Development Process (www. fda. gov/cder/handbook/develop
The FDA: Basic Facts It takes 12 to 15 years to develop a single drug Only 1 in 10,000 potential medications makes it completely through the process Only.
Using Predictive Classifiers in the Design of Phase III Clinical Trials Richard Simon, D.Sc. Chief, Biometric Research Branch National Cancer Institute.
Privacy Symposium / HIPAA Summit
Regulatory Aspects of PK/PD – (modelling) Karolina Törneke Senior expert, member of the CVMP.
Integrating Pharmacogenomic Questions Into GCIG Ovarian Cancer Clinical Trials Lori Minasian, MD Chief, Community Oncology and Prevention Trials Research.
Consumer Advocate Perspective Clinical Trials Registration Sharon F. Terry, JAM Sharon F. Terry, JAM President and CEO, Genetic Alliance, Inc. Founding.
Applying New Science to Drug Safety Janet Woodcock, M.D. Acting Deputy Commissioner for Operations April 15, 2005.
Bioequivalence Criteria Research Plan Stella G. Machado, Ph.D. Office of Biostatistics and the Replicate Design Technical Committee Advisory Committee.
Human Genomics Higher Human Biology. Learning Intentions Explain what is meant by human genomics State that bioinformatics can be used to identify DNA.
Origins of Pharmacogenomics. Archibald Garrod In 1902 Garrod characterized the condition of alcaptonuria as one resulting from an absence of the.
A substance used in the diagnosis, treatment, or prevention of a disease or as a component of a medication recognized or defined by the U.S. Food, Drug,
Clinical Trials.
European Patients’ Academy on Therapeutic Innovation Challenges in Personalised Medicine.
Patient Focused Drug Development An FDA Perspective
Pharmacogenomics: towards personalized medicine
FDA’s IDE Decisions and Communications
Clinical Trials — A Closer Look
Pharmacogenomics Identification of genes variants that influence drug effects. Is it possible to predict the effect of a drug in a certain patient? Pharmacogenetics/genomics.
New Targets, New Modalities, New Challenges – The Inconvenient Path of Human Genetics in Drug Discovery Enabling Precision Medicine: The Role of Genetics.
Rational for the 5R Philosophy
Objective 2 Biomedical Research Methods
Introduction to Pharmacogenetics
Pharmacogenomics Identification of genes variants that influence drug effects. Is it possible to predict the effect of a drug in a certain patient? Pharmacogenetics/genomics.
Presentation transcript:

Pharmacogenomics in Drug Development FDA Science Board April 9, 2003 Brian B. Spear, Ph.D. Director, Pharmacogenomics Abbott Laboratories

Presentation Overview n Current application of pharmacogenomics in drug development n Industry concerns regarding the conduct of pharmacogenomic studies and submission of pharmacogenomic data

Current Applications of Pharmacogenomics n Primary uses relate to interpretation of clinical trial results, data quality, study design, and biomarkers. n Targeting drugs at genetically-defined populations is not a primary focus in pharmaceutical development n Three areas of greatest activity  Clinical genotyping  Pre-clinical gene expression  Clinical gene expression

Clinical Pharmacogenetics n Phase I studies  Explain outliers or patient-to-patient variability in PK  Exclude or include specific patients  Normalize genotype frequencies  Bridge to other populations

t 1/2, hr Example: Desipramine PK Parameters CYP2D6 *6/*9 Genotyping can increase trial safety and explain outlying data Drug interaction study CYP2D6 poor metabolizers (2 null alleles) excluded.CYP2D6 poor metabolizers (2 null alleles) excluded. One outlier with slow metabolismOne outlier with slow metabolism Outlier has *6 null allele and *9 allele with reduced enzymatic activity.Outlier has *6 null allele and *9 allele with reduced enzymatic activity. Expected occurrence of null/*9 genotype is 0.4%Expected occurrence of null/*9 genotype is 0.4% Katz et al., Abbott Labs.

Clinical Pharmacogenetics n Phase II/III studies  Identify genetically-defined groups with more pronounced or rapidly progressing disease  Exclude/include at-risk individuals  Stratify studies based on genotypes -Clinical response -Risk of adverse events  Where appropriate, develop drugs for specific groups  Identify genetic markers associated with clinical outcomes

Example: Gene Association using SNP Mapping Association of anonymous SNP markers with Alzheimer’s Disease APOe Similar methods can be used to identify genes associated with drug effect or drug adverse reactions Courtesy Allen Roses, GSK

Pre-clinical Gene Expression n Toxicogenomics  Predict toxicity of candidate compounds  Identify mechanisms of toxicity n Identify potential biomarkers for toxicity or efficacy for future clinical studies

Example: Toxicogenomics of Hepatotoxic Compounds 52 compounds – rat liver mRNA analyzed by microarray Waring, et al., Abbott

Gene p-value Gene Expression Studies Can Produce Enormous Amounts of Data Page 2 of 28 Page Document Statistical methods are being developed for interpretation

Clinical Gene Expression n Biomarkers for drug response n Biomarkers for drug-induced toxicity n Comparison of human response to pre-clinical animal models n Identify genes with variants that may define patient populations n Identify proteins as potential biomarkers

Responder Non-Responder Avg. PSI Avg. PSI Fold Change (lesion/treatment) (lesion/treatment) Treatment Week Example: Gene Expression in Clinical Trials Response to Cyclosporin and rhIL11 in Psoriasis Evaluation of >7000 genes in microarrayEvaluation of >7000 genes in microarray 159 found to associate with psoriasis159 found to associate with psoriasis 142 found to associate with improvement of psoriatic skin in response to therapeutic agents142 found to associate with improvement of psoriatic skin in response to therapeutic agents Gene expression reflects drug responseGene expression reflects drug response Andrew J. Dorner Molecular Medicine, Wyeth Self-organizing map analysis of drug response for psoriasis- related genes

The Challenge in High-Density Genomic Analyses n Modern micro-array and whole genome analyses can generate tens of thousands of data points n Analysis is dependent upon statistical methods which are themselves experimental n No clear methods to determine validity of conclusions n Results can be subject to multiple interpretations n Genomics data and biological impact is incompletely understood

Submission of Data From Pharmacogenomic Studies n Drug developers are hesitant to initiate high- density pharmacogenomic studies and reluctant to share data with regulators  Analytical methods have not been developed to the point where valid conclusions can be drawn  Data can be subjected to multiple statistical methods  Reviewers might lack appropriate training or expertise  Results may be mis- or over-interpreted  Review may impact review timeline n These may lead to unfavorable regulatory impact and jeopardize a drug development program

Commentary on Preliminary FDA Proposal on Submission of Pharmacogenomic Data n Favorable aspects  Lowering of risk in conducting high-density pharmacogenomic studies  Evaluation by qualified experts  Consistent evaluation covering multiple compounds  Pharmacogenomics review independent of medical review timeline  Joint FDA/Industry effort to provide common basis for research exemption process

Commentary on Preliminary FDA Proposal on Submission of Pharmacogenomic Data n Uncertain aspects  Definition of “Pharmacogenomic Data”  Terms under which public health concerns would overrule research exemption  Process for feedback from FDA to companies n Unfavorable aspects  Possible future rescinding of research exemption  Potential requirement for additional studies for drug registration

Key Challenges in Pharmacogenomics n Complexity of biological responses: genetics isn’t everything n Value of a pharmacogenomic study is often unknown until it has been completed n No clear regulatory pathway for pharmaco- genomics (including assays) n Financial constraints weigh against programs with uncertain outcomes Data submission is only one of many issues facing industry

Unresolved Issues in Application of Pharmacogenomics n What are reasonable expectations of the role of genetics in drug responses? n If a relationship is identified between a genotype and a response, will that lead to specific labeling requirements, even if the drug is safe and effective for the general population? n Will collection of DNA in a clinical trial be a green light for the FDA to request pharmacogenetic studies?

n Will the division of the patient population into multiple genetic subgroups lead to a request for larger studies to enable statistical power for each group? n What will be the regulatory requirements for tests indicated on the drug label (IVD vs homebrew) and for tests used in genotyping for registrational studies? n Under what conditions will it be possible to label a drug based on testing of only a pharmacogenetically defined patient group? Unresolved Issues in Application of Pharmacogenomics

Conclusions n Pharmacogenomics is becoming an integral part of drug discovery and development n Excellent progress is being made in cooperative programs between industry and the FDA n Clarity in the FDA’s expectations of pharmacogenomics will encourage the use of these new technologies