| Literature DB >> 35437569 |
Pelin L Candarlioglu1, Gianni Dal Negro1, David Hughes2, Frances Balkwill3, Kate Harris4, Hazel Screen5, Hywel Morgan6, Rhiannon David7, Sonja Beken8, Olivier Guenat9, Wendy Rowan10, Augustin Amour11.
Abstract
As an emerging hot topic of the last decade, Organ on Chip (OoC) is a new technology that is attracting interest from both basic and translational scientists. The Biochemical Society, with its mission of supporting the advancement of science, with addressing grand challenges that have societal impact, has included OoC into their agenda to review the current state of the art, bottlenecks and future directions. This conference brought together representatives of the main stakeholders in the OoC field including academics, end-users, regulators and technology developers to discuss and identify requirements for this new technology to deliver on par with the expectations and the key challenges and gaps that still need to be addressed to achieve robust human-relevant tools, able to positively impact decision making in the pharmaceutical industry and reduce overreliance on poorly predictive animal models.Entities:
Keywords: drug discovery and design; organ on chip; translational science
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35437569 PMCID: PMC9162452 DOI: 10.1042/BST20200661
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Soc Trans ISSN: 0300-5127 Impact factor: 4.919
Key messages from the conference portraying the current state of the field and the future roadmap
| Key opportunities, challenges and solutions to improve the field: lessons from the panel discussion | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bottlenecks | Bigger picture | Future opportunities | Key questions for future | Proposed actions To further develop alternatives |
| • Very crowded field, hard to distinguish early on what will have longevity
• Current model development timelines are too long, more momentum is needed.
• Creating separate models for each case is not sustainable. Need to combine safety and efficacy models
• Communication and interaction between networks are fragmented
• Data sharing between end-users and other stakeholders is still poor
• Endpoint specific performance criteria with open source positive and negative reference compounds are lacking for most context of use, hindering unified qualification
• Access to the right human tissue that is of good quality, functional and representative of the physiology is a challenge | • Examples of pharma integration into workflow are appearing which were not there a few years ago • Regulators are open to see combined safety and efficacy on the same model • Using OoC might be costly but compared with the cost of failed animal experiments or failed clinical trials, that is negligible. If translatable, the value is self-evident and worth the investment. • Complexity in system shouldn't be the complexity in use, it should be simple to use and robust. • Need to engage with the regulators early on. Multidisciplinary nature of OoC technology has more potential to capture human relevance and that is a factor for increased confidence of regulators • Applicability of clinical biomarkers for qualification endpoints will increase confidence because they are established validated biomarkers that are already in use. This will increase the translatability and the performance evaluation of these models. | • Possible to see OoC generated data as part of IND dossier in near future
• Fully validated model with patient samples can be used for | • - Well defined protocol - Defined context of use and the clear relevance showing the accuracy and also the limits of the method - Show reliability and robustness | • Regulators are the judge and you are trying to answer their questions so allow them to tailor your development accordingly. They also have oversight on every drug modality and can help with giving insight into the tools that are needed or to identify the gaps.
• Data submission to regulators is encouraged |
Figure 1.Roadmap towards achieving harmonisation and regulatory acceptance for OoC models.