Discovery & Development of Drugs (AQA GCSE Biology)
Revision Note
Written by: Lára Marie McIvor
Reviewed by: Lucy Kirkham
Discovering New Drugs
Traditionally drugs were extracted from plants and microorganisms
New drugs are being developed all the time by scientists at universities and drug companies around the world
Lots of the medications that we use today are based on chemicals extracted from plants
The heart drug digitalis originates from foxgloves
The painkiller aspirin originates from willow
Penicillin was discovered by Alexander Fleming from the Penicillium mould
Most new drugs are synthesised by chemists in the pharmaceutical industry. However, the starting point may still be a chemical extracted from a plant
Drugs from plants table
Penicillin was first discovered by Alexander Flemming in 1928. He left some Petri dishes that had been contaminated with mould and found the bacteria would not grow near the mould
He discovered that the mould (Penicillium notatum) was releasing a chemical (penicillin) that killed the bacteria surrounding it
New drugs are now developed by the pharmaceutical industry. Many of these still have plants as their source
Testing New Drugs
All new drugs need to be tested and trialled before they can be used in patients. They are tested for:
Toxicity – does it have harmful side effects?
Efficacy – does the drug work?
Dose – what dose is the lowest that can be used and still have an effect?
The results of any testing are then peer-reviewed to make sure that the results are described accurately. The results would then be published in journals
Developing New Drugs
Preclinical testing is done in a laboratory using cells, tissues and live animals
Clinical trials use healthy volunteers and patients
Very low doses of the drug are given at the start of the clinical trial
If the drug is found to be safe, further clinical trials are carried out to find the optimum dose for the drug
In double-blind trials, some patients are given a placebo
The 3 stages of drug development
Preclinical Testing
The drug is tested on cells in the lab
Computer models may also be used to simulate the metabolic pathways that may be taken by the drug
Efficacy and toxicity are tested at this stage
Whole organism testing
The drug is tested on animals to see the effect in a whole organism – all new medicines in the UK have to have tests on 2 different animals by law
Efficacy, toxicity and dosage are tested at this stage
Clinical trials
The drug is tested on human volunteers first, generally with a very low dose then increased. This is to make sure it is safe in a body that is working normally
The next stage is to test on patients with the condition.
The patients are often split into two groups; one given the drug the other given a placebo. This is called a double-blind study – neither the doctor nor the patient knows if the patient is getting the placebo or the active drug
Once the drug is found to be safe then the lowest effective dose is tested at this stage
Future medications
Pharmaceutical companies are always looking to find new medications these include:
Vaccinations to different diseases
Antibiotics that have a different action on the bacteria, so that bacteria are not resistant to them
Painkillers with fewer side effects
Antiviral drugs that don’t damage the body’s tissues
Sources of these medications may be plants or microorganisms
Examiner Tips and Tricks
You should be able to describe the process of discovery and development of potential new medicines, including preclinical and clinical testing in the exam.
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