Drug repurposing for glomerular diseases: an underutilized resource.
Monica Suet Ying NgGursimran KaurRoss S FrancisCarmel M HawleyDavid Wayne JohnsonPublished in: Nature reviews. Nephrology (2024)
Drug repurposing in glomerular disease can deliver opportunities for steroid-free regimens, enable personalized multi-target options for resistant or relapsing disease and enhance treatment options for understudied populations (for example, children) and in resource-limited settings. Identification of drug-repurposing candidates can be data driven, which utilizes existing data on disease pathobiology, drug features and clinical outcomes, or experimental, which involves high-throughput drug screens. Information from databases of approved drugs, clinical trials and PubMed registries suggests that at least 96 drugs on the market cover 49 targets with immunosuppressive potential that could be candidates for drug repurposing in glomerular disease. Furthermore, evidence to support drug repurposing is available for 191 immune drug target-glomerular disease pairs. Non-immunological drug repurposing includes strategies to reduce haemodynamic overload, podocyte injury and kidney fibrosis. Recommended strategies to expand drug-repurposing capacity in glomerular disease include enriching drug databases with glomeruli-specific information, enhancing the accessibility of primary clinical trial data, biomarker discovery to improve participant selection into clinical trials and improve surrogate outcomes and initiatives to reduce patent, regulatory and organizational hurdles.
Keyphrases
- clinical trial
- high throughput
- adverse drug
- drug induced
- healthcare
- young adults
- gene expression
- multiple sclerosis
- type diabetes
- transcription factor
- randomized controlled trial
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- dna methylation
- metabolic syndrome
- genome wide
- phase ii
- climate change
- adipose tissue
- health information
- study protocol
- insulin resistance
- deep learning