| Literature DB >> 33694032 |
Mark David Tricklebank1, Trevor W Robbins2, Camilla Simmons3, Erik H F Wong4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is urgent need for new medications for psychiatric disorders. Mental illness is expected to become the leading cause of disability worldwide by 2030. Yet, the last two decades have seen the pharmaceutical industry withdraw from psychiatric drug discovery after costly late-stage trial failures in which clinical efficacy predicted pre-clinically has not materialised, leading to a crisis in confidence in preclinical psychopharmacology.Entities:
Keywords: New medications; Psychiatric disorder; Psychiatric drug discovery; Systems neurosciencese
Year: 2021 PMID: 33694032 PMCID: PMC7945970 DOI: 10.1007/s00213-021-05787-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychopharmacology (Berl) ISSN: 0033-3158 Impact factor: 4.530
Fig. 1Schematic diagram to illustrate how in theory the 8 principles (identified by digits) might enhance CNS drug discovery (when applied in the sequence indicated by arrows, from left to right). Basic neuroscience feeds into the definition of disease phenotypes that define targets, and the generation of disease-relevant perturbations. Test molecules are generated from a variety of platforms including medicinal chemistry. Molecules are tested in animal and humans using translational methods and paradigms. Targets are validated and clinical efficacy tested via collaborative studies. Results of studies are fed back to validate, or otherwise, the methods employed, or the molecule tested, or its clinical target
Fig. 2Schematic diagram to illustrate how in practice the 8 principles (identified by digits), applied in the sequence identified by arrows, might enhance CNS drug discovery, in the case of a specific example, drugs to enhance cognition in schizophrenia. See legend to Fig. 1 for further description. Not all medications would necessarily require deployment of all 8 principles