JoVE Logo

Accedi

1.3 : Clinical Trials: Overview

Clinical development focuses on how the drug will interact with the human body and encompasses four key phases of clinical trials, each serving a specific purpose in assessing the safety and effectiveness of new drugs. These phases overlap and build upon one another. Phase I involves a small group of healthy volunteers (typically 20-80 individuals) or, in cases where significant toxicity is expected, patients with the targeted disease, such as cancer or AIDS. The volunteers are tested for potential adverse effects, tolerability, and pharmacokinetic properties. Phase II expands to include a larger group of patients (around 100-300) to evaluate pharmacodynamic effects and identify potential therapeutic candidates. Phase III comprises double-blind, randomized trials involving thousands of patients to compare the new drug with existing alternatives or placebos. These trials are comprehensive, costly, and time-consuming. Finally, Phase IV consists of post-marketing surveillance to monitor rare or long-term adverse effects in a large patient population.

Clinical trials must adhere to Good Clinical Practice (GCP) guidelines, ensuring meticulous patient group selection, data collection, statistical analysis, and documentation. Phase III trials increasingly incorporate pharmacoeconomic analysis to assess clinical and economic benefits. Upon completion of Phase III, the drug undergoes submission to regulatory authorities for licensing, accompanied by a detailed dossier of preclinical and clinical data.

The drug development process, including clinical trials, spans 7 to 12 years. The FDA oversees the approval and monitoring of new drugs, requiring manufacturers to undergo in vitro and in vivo testing before applying for Investigational New Drug (IND) status. Approval from regulatory authorities can take a year or longer, and only about two-thirds of submissions receive marketing approval.

Tags

Clinical TrialsDrug DevelopmentPhase IPhase IIPhase IIIPhase IVGood Clinical Practice GCPPharmacokineticsPharmacodynamicsAdverse EffectsRegulatory AuthoritiesInvestigational New Drug INDFDA ApprovalPost marketing SurveillanceTherapeutic Candidates

Dal capitolo 1:

article

Now Playing

1.3 : Clinical Trials: Overview

General Pharmacological Principles

2.6K Visualizzazioni

article

1.1 : Scoperta di farmaci: panoramica

General Pharmacological Principles

7.3K Visualizzazioni

article

1.2 : Sviluppo preclinico: panoramica

General Pharmacological Principles

4.1K Visualizzazioni

article

1.4 : Nomenclatura dei farmaci

General Pharmacological Principles

1.5K Visualizzazioni

article

1.5 : Regolamentazione dei farmaci

General Pharmacological Principles

1.3K Visualizzazioni

article

1.6 : Classi e categorie di farmaci

General Pharmacological Principles

1.8K Visualizzazioni

article

1.7 : Legami farmaco-recettore

General Pharmacological Principles

2.6K Visualizzazioni

article

1.8 : Interazioni farmaco-recettore

General Pharmacological Principles

4.7K Visualizzazioni

article

1.9 : Vie di somministrazione dei farmaci: panoramica

General Pharmacological Principles

5.3K Visualizzazioni

article

1.10 : Vie di somministrazione del farmaco: enterale

General Pharmacological Principles

3.1K Visualizzazioni

article

1.11 : Vie di somministrazione del farmaco: Parenterale

General Pharmacological Principles

1.8K Visualizzazioni

article

1.12 : Vie aggiuntive di somministrazione del farmaco

General Pharmacological Principles

2.7K Visualizzazioni

article

1.13 : Farmaci soggetti a prescrizione, senza prescrizione medica e farmaci orfani

General Pharmacological Principles

670 Visualizzazioni

article

1.14 : Fattori che influenzano la risposta ai farmaci: panoramica

General Pharmacological Principles

1.8K Visualizzazioni

JoVE Logo

Riservatezza

Condizioni di utilizzo

Politiche

Ricerca

Didattica

CHI SIAMO

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tutti i diritti riservati