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Evotec

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Improving Drug Safety with Transcriptomics

Posted by Evotec on Jul 19, 2022 5:09:05 PM

According to a study from 2020, a total of 133 drugs were withdrawn from the market due to safety reasons between 1990 and 2010. Major causes were hepatotoxicity (27.1%), cardiac disorders (18.8%), hypersensitivity (12.8%), and nephrotoxicity (9.8%), accounting for 69.2% of all drugs withdrawn. In most cases, these withdrawals were initiated because of spontaneous reports and/or case reports. Another study looking into drug withdrawals between 1953 and 2013 revealed that 18% of drug withdrawals from the market in this period were due to liver damage.

Add to these withdrawals of marketed drugs the attrition rate of drug candidates in clinical trials: 90 percent of all drug candidates fail in clinical trials, and 30 percent of these failures are due to unmanageable toxicity issues.

These failures occur despite thorough preclinical work and intensive animal studies. It is estimated that only 50% of the compounds that cause liver toxicity in humans are detected by animal studies. Furthermore, some adverse reactions or idiosyncratic toxic effects are typically not detected until the drug in question has gained large exposure in a broad patient population.

Interestingly, a study evaluating the attrition of drug candidates from AstraZeneca, Eli Lilly and Company, GlaxoSmithKline and Pfizer came to the conclusion that there is a strong link between physicochemical properties of compounds and clinical failure due to safety issues. The results also suggest that further control of physicochemical properties is unlikely to have a significant effect on attrition rates and that additional work is required to address safety-related failures.

These failures are not only costly (according to the FDA, drug development takes over 10–15 years with an average cost of over $1–2 billion for each new drug to be approved), but are also putting the health and the life of patients in danger.

Consequently, Cyprotex and its parent company Evotec are very focused on assessing toxicology issues from the very beginning of its drug R&D process and have invested a significant amount of time and resources to expand its technologies for the toxicological evaluation of drug candidates.

“The idea is to make better informed decisions earlier in your discovery campaign when you can select potentially safer compounds, rather than finding a safety liability later on,” says Paul Walker PhD, Vice President, Head of Toxicology at Cyprotex, in Cheshire, UK.

This improved discovery and selection is implemented by Cyprotex by using the unbiased view of transcriptomics and its potential to predict drug-induced toxicity. Transcriptomics involves sequencing thousands of mRNA molecules to identify which processes are active in the cell and allows for a better understanding of the cell’s reaction to known and novel drugs.

This is by no means a purely academic endeavour. As an example, the Cyprotex team demonstrated via transcriptomics it was able to identify problems in liver cells treated with fasiglifam, a promising diabetes drug candidate, which was withdrawn from late-stage clinical trials by its developer, following signs of liver damage in trial participants. This example proves that transcriptomics could have raised a red flag during preclinical development and might have saved hundreds of millions of dollars.

“Our studies have found potential effects on mitochondrial function, which were previously missed in preclinical studies” says Walker.

Therefore, transcriptomics has the potential to supplement or reduce in vivo toxicology studies by effectively identifying safety issues early in drug development, saving time and money — and animal testing.

Sophisticated Human Cell-Based Models

A key advantage of transcriptomics is its use of human cells and Evotec as well as Cyprotex are not just looking at 2D cell cultures, but investigating 3D organoids. These structures formed of thousands of cells that mimic organ-specific tissues are much closer to the real organ and have valuable features: For example, 3D-organoids of the heart exhibit regular contractions, beating like a living heart, and liver organoids secrete typical liver enzymes for days.

“On top of that, a 3D system allows repeat dosing, mimicking dosing regimens in vivo and potentially helps to detect effects due to toxic metabolites,” says Walker.

As they are small, the organoids can be placed in 384-well plates and individually molecular barcoded for simultaneous sequencing. This combination of miniaturization and high-throughput screening is implemented in Evotec’s EVOpanOmics platform and allows a wider adoption of transcriptomics in preclinical toxicology studies allowing for the repeat testing of dozens or even hundreds of compounds at several doses and in multiple organs.

“People have thought about using transcriptomics for toxicology before, but it was always a numbers game,” explains Rüdiger Fritsch PhD, Principal Scientist and Project Lead for EVOpanOmics. “For any compound that’s a real troublemaker, the evidence will show up in the transcriptomics data if you profile it in a relevant model. You just need to test appropriate dosing scenarios with the breadth of genome-wide off-target effects so that you have a chance to find it.”

Complex Analysis of Transcriptomics Data

Evotec, in conjunction with Cyprotex, offers transcriptomics services to drug developers and carries out the entire process in-house, from growing the organoids to sequencing and analysis. This streamlined process allows its researchers to screen hundreds of compounds a day, each delivering tens of thousands of data points on RNA levels. To analyze all of these vast amounts of data, Evotec has developed a software platform called EVOpanHunter that allows among others the analysis of these transcriptomics in an interactive manner.

“We want to democratize data analysis for the biologists who know the biological pathways and processes, without them needing to rely on additional experts from the bioinformatics department for routine tasks,” says Carla Tameling PhD, Head of Sales and Application for EVOpanHunter at Evotec.

On top of the interactive multi-omics analysis platform machine learning is used to trawl through this immense amount of data in order to find specific patterns hinting for toxicological effects and alert the researchers to dig deeper. “The more data we get, the harder it is for a human to dig through it all,” adds Tameling. “Transcriptomics is an unbiased view. You don’t need to define what to look at prior to your studies — you get all the data, and you might see things that you didn’t think would be relevant initially.”

From publically available sources, Cyprotex has compiled a broad and highly valuable transcriptomics reference database for drug-induced liver injuries.. Machine learning is being applied to predict whether a compound is likely to have issues by comparing the observed pattern of gene activity to the activity patterns of known toxic molecules. Furthermore, this is not restricted to hepotoxicity. Cyprotex is already building databases of other organs, such as heart, kidney and brain, using publicly available drug development trial results to select a broad space of reference comounds. “We’re running reference compounds from all kinds of sources where we know there are either late-stage clinical findings or withdrawals from the market,” states Walker.

Given the rapid advancements of the technology, it may be only a matter of time before transcriptomics and other omics technologies become a regulatory standard approach for preclinical toxicity testing.

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Tags: Blog, In vitro Biology, Toxicology & Safety, Modelling and Simulation

European Society of Gene and Cell Therapy (ESGCT)

Posted by Evotec on Jul 19, 2022 2:42:53 PM

Date: 11 – 14 October 2022

Venue: Edinburgh International Conference Centre, Scotland

Attendees: Patrice Douillard, Florence Eustache, Fabio Canneva, Hanspeter Rottensteiner, Laura Boschi, Kathrin Haake

Discuss your gene and cell therapy requirements with our experts at Booth #68.


On Thursday 13th and Friday 14th, Fabio will present the scientific poster entitled, ‘Advanced characterization of human hepatocytes xenotransplanted mice as predictive pharmacological tool system for human liver-targeted gene therapy’.

If you wish to meet with us in Edinburgh, get in touch via the form below, we will be happy to arrange a meeting.

Learn more about ESGCT.

Tags: Events, Evotec

Transcriptomics Brings New Era of Toxicology Prediction

Posted by Evotec on Jul 15, 2022 12:26:45 PM

Read our Nature article on how transcriptomics with machine learning and AI is transforming toxicology prediction.

Tags: Featured

24th International Symposium on Microsomes and Drug Oxidations and 13th International ISSX Meeting

Posted by Evotec on Jul 15, 2022 8:23:39 AM

Date: 11 - 14 September 2022

Location: The Westin Seattle, Seattle, Washington, USA

Attendees: David Cerny & Sravani Adusumalli

Presenting: 'Development of a High-Throughput Time Dependent Inhibition of CYP450 Assay in Cryopreserved Human Hepatocytes' 

Come and join us at our booth No 3 

Learn more about 24th International Symposium on Microsomes and Drug Oxidations and 13th International ISSX Meeting

Tags: Events, Cyprotex

9th Aging Research and Drug Discovery Meeting

Posted by Evotec on Jul 14, 2022 2:56:42 PM

Date: 29 August - 2 September 2022

Venue: University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark

Attendees: Sneha Kumar and Frederic Somny (on-site), Steve England (virtual)

 

If you wish to meet with us in Denmark, get in touch via the form below, we will be happy to arrange a meeting.

Learn more about ARDD 2022.

Tags: Events, Evotec

3rd European Biotransformation Workshop

Posted by Evotec on Jul 14, 2022 1:23:03 PM

Date: 5-6 October 2022

Location: Hotel Movenpick Amsterdam City Centre, Piet Heinkade 11, 1019 BR Amsterdam, Netherlands

Attendees: Anna Kerins and Marta Koszyczarek

Learn more about 3rd European Biotransformation Workshop

Tags: Events, Cyprotex

Peptide and Oligonucleotide ADME Workshop 2022 (POW22)

Posted by Evotec on Jul 14, 2022 1:17:31 PM

Date: 2 - 3 October 2022

Location: Park Plaza Victoria Amsterdam, Damrak 1-5, 1012 LG Amsterdam, Netherlands

Attendees: Basile Khara 

Learn more about Peptide and Oligonucleotide ADME Workshop 2022 (POW22)

Tags: Events, Cyprotex

BIO-Europe 2022

Posted by Evotec on Jul 14, 2022 12:34:17 PM

Date: 24-26 October, 2022

Venue: Leipzig Messe, Leipzig, Germany

Attendees: 

Werner Lanthaler, Chief Executive Officer
Matthias Evers, Chief Business Officer
Thomas Hanke, Executive Vice President, Head of Academic Partnerships
Ryan Brady, Executive Vice President, Head of Global Discovery Business Development
Friedrich Scheiflinger, Executive Vice President, General Manager Evotec Gene Therapy
Bernd Muehlenweg, Senior Vice President, Global Business Development
Christelle Dagoneau, Senior Vice President, Business Development
Jason Brown, Senior Vice President, Business Development
Sneha Kumar, Director, Business Development
Christine Guenther, Entrepreneur in Residence, Medical Director Cell Therapy
Dara Henry, Entrepreneur in Residence
Insa Hartmann, Associate, Global Business Development

 

Evotec will be a sponsor at BIO-Europe 2022 in Leipzig and will be at booth #82c.

Our CEO, Werner Lanthaler, and SVP, Global Business Development, Bernd Muehlenweg, will speak at the event.

 

Lanthaler,Werner

Werner Lanthaler

Chief Executive Officer, Evotec

Opening plenary session:

Opportunities created by a bear market - There IS a silver lining

Monday, 24 October 2022

10:45 - 11:45 CET/CEST

Location: Level 1, Hall 1

Bernd-circle

Bernd Muehlenweg

Senior Vice President, Global Business Development

Panel session:

Global dealmaking in a global indication: oncology partnering in 2022

Tuesday, 25 October 2022

09:00-10:00 CET/CEST

Location: Multi-purpose room 3

 

Talk to us about:

  • Biologics
  • iPSC based Cell Therapy
  • Panomics
  • Integrated R&D

We look forward to meeting all the biopharma community in Leipzig!

 

If you wish to arrange a one-on-one meeting with us in Leipzig, you can request a meeting via the BIO-Europe PartneringONE platofrm or get in touch via the form below, we will be happy to arrange a meeting. 

Learn more about Bio Europe.

Tags: Events, Evotec

Using RIS to Improve Risk Assessment of CYP Induction

Posted by Evotec on Jul 12, 2022 12:25:10 PM

Watch the webinar to learn more about recent updates in CYP induction!

 


About the Webinar

Cytochrome (CYP) P450 induction is a well-established mechanism for increased prevalence of DDIs. Whilst its study in vitro has been described in regulatory guidance for over 20 years, data interpretation methods and details for study design have evolved and the best approaches for study of small molecules and other therapeutics are still being discussed within CROs, pharma and biotechs.

In this webinar our expert, Katie Plant, describes the most recent updates in CYP induction. By reviewing and consolidating literature and recent perspectives from Innovation and Quality Induction Working Group (IQ IWG) alongside the regulatory guidance, this provides a comprehensive overview and outlines the recommended approach to assess CYP induction in vitro. When supported by well-designed in vitro assays and batch qualification using a known set of CYP3A4 inducers, relative induction score (RIS) correlation analysis serves as a useful tool enabling the magnitude of clinical CYP3A4 induction to be predicted and used to support decision-making for investigating potential DDI risk.


About the Speaker

 

Plant,KatieRSZ

Katie Plant

Principal Scientist | Cyprotex Discovery Ltd

Katie Plant is a Principal Scientist in the Drug Metabolism group at Cyprotex, UK, responsible for operational delivery of high-throughput screening assays covering metabolic stability, enzyme inhibition and induction, alongside supporting clients in designing and interpreting DDI studies to support regulatory submission, supporting R&D and bespoke studies and driving continuous improvement projects.

Watch the webinar to learn more!

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Tags: Videos & Webinars, ADME/DMPK

AAV Gene Therapy: Closing the Translational Gap

Posted by Evotec on Jul 11, 2022 10:53:30 AM

Gene therapy based on adeno-associated virus (AAV) has come a long way and has been used for more than 20 years in over 2,000 patients. While AAV based gene therapy is regarded as generally safe, the field has experienced several setbacks recently: some trials were halted for safety reasons and product approvals were delayed.

The reasons for these developments are complex, but gene therapy is nowadays not only applied to a narrow spectrum of rare diseases with no other treatments available but is also beginning to be used as a therapeutic option in more common diseases. Consequently, many more patients are being treated and several limitations have surfaced:

  • The quality of the clinically used vector material is often, despite cGMP manufacturing requirements, insufficient to prevent adverse events
  •  For difficult to access tissues, site-specific administration and delivery of gene therapy vectors can be an important barrier
  • The database to demonstrate long lasting therapeutic effects in clinical trials is often thin and the interpretation of results can be difficult
  • Patients experience serious adverse events after escalating to high AAV doses

The lack of AAV materials with high and reproducible quality, particularly the presence of substantial amounts of empty capsids is, at times, making the interpretation of controlled clinical trials difficult. Insufficient product quality in combination with very high AAV vector doses often leads to a massive presence of capsids in the liver, causing inflammatory responses and raising safety concerns. In addition, AAV vectors with a desired tropism towards specific tissues or organs and a high yield manufacturability are scarce, thereby limiting the applicability of AAV gene therapy. Yet another complication is that current AAV-based gene therapy technology cannot offer a once in a lifetime treatment in many cases, requiring a repeated dosing (if feasible) in case of therapeutic effects diminishing over time.

Adding to these issues is the fact that about 50 percent of the population already has some immunity to AAV so that not all affected patients will benefit from AAV-based gene therapies.

How to improve AAV-based therapies?

Evotec has identified and addressed a number of issues which were presented in our recent webinar titled “AAV Gene Therapy: Closing the Translational Gap”. According to Hanspeter Rottensteiner, VP, Head of In Vitro Gene Therapy of Evotec Austria, the most important needs are to:

  1. Improve the delivery vectors by developing capsids with better tissue tropism and translating into improved efficacy and safety. Also, promoters and the respective transgene need to be optimized to improve cell-type specificity, controllability, and durability
  2. Gain better insights into the effects of gene therapy by developing better biomarkers

Improve tracking and analyzing of side effects, for instance by tracking protein expression and metabolic fluxes with proteomic and metabolomic platforms and via high-throughput sequencing of RNA and DNA in target and non-target tissue and cells

Improved specificity

Dirk Grimm, Professor for Viral Vector Technologies at Heidelberg University, explains in the webinar that - thanks to new powerful technologies - knowledge about the host factors that influence AAV vector transduction has increased tremendously. In addition, many new technologies allow for the rational design of next-generation AAV capsids. These novel vectors not only avoid neutralizing anti-AAV antibodies circulating in the human population but also outperform wild-type capsids in terms of potency and / or specificity. Grimm demonstrated as an example that rationally designed myotropic AAV capsids with a tropism exclusively for muscle cells did not accumulate in the liver at all. They demonstrate a substantial improvement in terms of specificity as compared to capsids in use today. The latest technology advancement – barcoding of capsids and nucleic acids - allows for tracking capsids not only to specific organs and tissues but can also tell whether a functional transduction has taken place. Grimm added that the increased use of artificial intelligence will also make animal experiments largely obsolete. In his view, it will be possible in the future to design capsids tailormade to individual patients and their disease.

Filling the gaps

Werner Höllriegl, VP, Head of In Vivo Gene Therapy at Evotec GT GmbH, detailed in the webinar the current gaps in translational efficacy and safety that Evotec is addressing when preparing first-in-human trials. Great efforts are made to assess toxicity in liver, cardiovascular and nervous systems, but also for evaluation of potential oncogenic effects.
Höllriegl also mentioned gaps that cannot be filled by Evotec alone but require a concerted effort by the gene therapy community. Among them are lacking industry standards for AAV titers and dose assessments and guidance from the regulatory agencies on the design of preclinical studies that can best inform IND decisions.
He stressed, however, that even more research at basic and translational science level is needed to tackle specific efficacy or safety issues.

Comprehensive safety assessment

Evotec also brings its already long-established strong expertise in prediction of drug-induced liver injury to the table – an experience gained with small molecules, as explained by Rüdiger Fritsch, Principal Scientist, Metabolic Diseases at Evotec. Among other safety assessments, the Company uses a wealth of technologies and expertise to identify transcriptomic fingerprints and applies its proprietary and continuously growing database of tox-related data from hundreds of tested compounds. AI-based modeling can predict mechanisms and probabilities for AAV-induced liver toxicity. Moreover, using single nucleic RNA-sequencing tools, Evotec can study and profile the expression and activity of the transgene at single cell level – not only in liver cells and organoids but in a growing portfolio of tissues from brain, muscle, lung, heart, and kidney. Evotec thereby is successfully translating its toxicology expertise from the small molecule space to gene therapy research and development, offering a 21st century omics-approach to provide for safe and efficacious gene therapy vectors.

Stream the webinar

Tags: Blog, Rare Diseases