pfisherman 6 hours ago

This article kind of grinds my gears. I feel like there is an unstated assumption that people in pharma R&D are idiots and haven’t thought of this stuff.

Pharma companies care very much about off target effects. Molecules get screened against tox targets, and a bad tox readout can be a death sentence for an entire program. And you need to look at the toxicity of major metabolites too.

One of the major value propositions of non small molecule modalities like biologics is specificity, and alternative metabolism pathways; no need to worry about the CYPs.

Another thing they fail to account for is volume of distribution. Does it matter if it hits some receptor only expressed in microglia if it can’t cross the blood brain barrier?

Also the reason why off targets for a lot of FDA approved drugs are unknown is because they were approved in the steampunk industrial era.

To me this whole article reads like an advertisement for a screening assay.

  • colingauvin 5 hours ago

    I work in drug discovery (like for real, I have a DC under my belt, not hypothetical AI protein generation blah blah) and had the opposite experience reading it. We understand so little about most drugs. Dialing out selectivity for a closely related protein was one of the most fun and eye opening experiences of my career.

    Of course we've thought of all these things. But it's typically fragmented, and oftentimes out of scope. One of the hardest parts of any R&D project is honestly just doing a literature search to the point of exhaustion.

    • _the_inflator 3 hours ago

      I side with you. The more you know, the more you discover what you don’t know.

      Every attempt to consider the extremely complex dynamics of human biology as a pure state machine, like with Pascal, deterministic of your know all the factors, is simplification and can safely be rejected as hypotheses.

      Hormons, age, sex, weight, food, aging, sun, environmental, epigenetic changes, body composition, activity level, infections, medication all play a role, even galenic.

  • abhishaike 6 hours ago

    >molecules get screened against tox targets

    sure! i cover this in the essay, the purpose of this dataset is not just toxicity, but repurposing also

    >toxicity of major metabolites

    this is planned (and also explicitly mentioned in the article)

    >no need to worry about CYP’s

    again, this is about more than just toxicity

    >volume of distribution

    i suppose, but this feels like a strange point to raise. this dataset doesnt account for a lot of things, no biological dataset does

    >advertisement

    to some degree: it is! but it is also one that is free for academic usage and the only one of its kind accessible to smaller biopharmas

    • pfisherman 2 hours ago

      My main point of skepticism about repurposing is whether this is giving any of new and actionable information. It seems to be reliant on pre existing target annotations, and qualified targets already have molecules designed for them. Is the off-target effect strong enough to give you a superior molecule? Why not just start by picking a qualified target and committing to designing a better molecule without doing all the off target assay stuff first?

nerdsniper 10 hours ago

Interestingly, it does not seem to have any controlled substances - even Schedule V drugs like Lyrica (pregabalin). So they've mapped estradiol and estrone, but not testosterone or drostanolone. Also cabergoline and pramipexole, but not amphetamine or methylphenidate.

  • Spivak 8 hours ago

    Is testosterone a controlled substance? But why?

    • Aurornis 3 hours ago

      Taking extra testosterone can be acutely rewarding and stimulating. It has moderate addiction potential.

      It also creates physical dependence by suppressing your body’s production, resulting in testicular atrophy. Some people who experiment with testosterone discover that it can take months or years to rebound, if they can at all.

    • Etheryte 8 hours ago

      All steroids have a very high risk of misuse, it's incredibly easy to get your body addicted one way or another and it's one of those things that's very hard to fix after the fact.

      • dvaun 8 hours ago

        Steroid abuse indicates body dysmorphia. There isn’t an addictive property like other abused drugs, unless you’re considering it addictive via its effects on dopamine production.

        Your body doesn’t become addicted, though. The potential for harm is real if you are not taking it under medical supervision or without proper knowledge of usage, like any other drugs.

        • Aurornis 3 hours ago

          > There isn’t an addictive property like other abused drugs,

          This is incorrect. Testosterone can be acutely rewarding and reinforcing, especially at high doses used by people seeking these effects.

          Seeking testosterone does not indicate body dysmorphia. People want it (or think they want it) for numerous reasons, from getting stronger to feeling “alpha” to thinking it will give them an edge.

          It’s also very dependence inducing because it shuts down physical production, so the person needs to continue taking it just to get back to baseline after using it for a while. At my very first job one of my coworkers got ahold of some testosterone gel and used it for several months until he ran out and couldn’t get any more. I clearly remember how bad he felt while going through withdrawals and rebound for months. I left before he fully recovered.

      • Spivak 8 hours ago

        The addictive component makes sense, does that mean men who are injured and produce less go through withdrawal? Or like men as they age? That sounds miserable.

        • throwaway48476 6 hours ago

          It means the body stops producing it and won't ever again.

          • GenerWork 5 hours ago

            This is absolutely false. There's thousands of gym bros who've done absolutely stupid cycles with absolutely no post cycle therapy who've recovered and are producing testosterone again.

            • the_sleaze_ 5 hours ago

              That's the tag-line but it isn't true.

              I personally know of several early 20s guys who were between light and heavy cycles all under the supervision of doctors (or at least getting blood tested periodically).

              All of them have renal issues, kidney issues, adrenal system issues, thyroid issues. Some have heart problems. Not one of them is unscathed.

    • BizarroLand 8 hours ago

      Because it can be dangerous if misused.

      It's a steroid, so body builders would use it constantly. It's a sex hormone, so people would use it to masculinize themselves and amp up their sex drive, and it's part of the pubertal cycle so children exposed to it pre-puberty can have masculinizing pubertal side effects before their actual puberty starts.

      • terminalshort 5 hours ago

        Everything can be dangerous if misused

      • Spivak 8 hours ago

        I'm not saying to sell it over the counter but surely just bring a prescription would be sufficient. I see medspa clinics advertising it to men for its masculinizing effects so it can't be that hard to acquire.

        • BizarroLand 8 hours ago

          You asked why it was a controlled substance.

          It's not hard to acquire. Doesn't mean that it's not a controlled substance.

          And in fact it is sold over the counter in other countries like Mexico. You get a "prescription" from the "on-site pharmacist" who is actually just some person who works the register.

          • Spivak 8 hours ago

            Is that how that works?! I've always wondered what legal trickery they used since Mexico isn't listed on the WHO's list of countries who don't require Rx for antibiotics.

        • immibis 8 hours ago

          Wouldn't needing a prescription be... a control?

          • leoh 7 hours ago

            Yes, but the DEA is unrelentingly cranky and likes to tell physicians how to practice medicine despite swearing up and down that they would never, ever do that.

            • klooney 4 hours ago

              California used to have a medical marijuana program where access was supposed to be controlled by requiring licensed physicians to prescribe it. Turns out there's enough disgraced doctors to rubber stamp huge volumes of prescriptions, rendering the control a joke.

              If the DEA isn't cranky, we go back to pill mills.

et2o 8 hours ago

People have been doing this for literally decades. Check out work by Tattonetti

nextworddev 4 hours ago

This substack has a serious fraud smell