The evolution of postgraduate vocational education and training in pharmaceutical medicine is described alongside the growth of this scientific-medical discipline and profession for the development of new medicines. Over the past 50 years, whilst the training of competent professionals for their work has been paramount, this has paralleled the need to engage with the rapid and complex changes in R&D technologies, patient and healthcare system needs, and the ethical and regulatory obligations applied to the development of medicines throughout their lifecycle. The move from unstructured training to formal programs with syllabus, curricula and assessments for certification, has been accompanied by educational changes to outcomes-based, learner-centered, competency-based programs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmaceutical medicine has evolved to be a distinct medical scientific discipline over time. Pharmaceutical medicine has distinctive features related to complex innovative medicines development activities in an often commercially focused competitive environment. This sometimes uneasy mix of professionalism and commercialisation demands of its medical and scientific researchers alike, a focus on strict adherence to ethical standards, guidelines, practices and behaviors in the interest of delivering new, effective, high-quality lifesaving and life-enhancing medicines quickly and reliably to patients in need.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrenylamine, an antianginal agent marketed since early 1960, became the first casualty of QT interval related proarrhythmias in 1988 when it was withdrawn from the market. The period of its synthesis and marketing is of particular interest since it antedated, first, any serious clinical safety concern regarding drug-induced prolongation of the QT interval which was, in fact, believed to be an efficient antiarrhythmic mechanism; second, the first description of torsade de pointes as a unique proarrhythmia, typically associated with prolonged QT interval; and third, the discovery and recognition of calcium antagonism as an important cardiovascular therapeutic strategy. This review, 30 years almost to the day following its withdrawal, provides interesting perspectives on clinical, pharmacological and regulatory outcomes that followed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Pharm Ther
February 2019
What Is Known And Objective: In order to expedite the availability of drugs to treat cancers in a cost-effective manner, repurposing of old drugs for oncological indications is gathering momentum. Revolutionary advances in pharmacology and genomics have demonstrated many old drugs to have activity at novel antioncogenic pharmacological targets. We decided to investigate whether prospective studies support the promises of nonclinical and retrospective clinical studies on repurposing three old drugs, namely metformin, valproate and astemizole.
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