Stimulating the development of mechanism-based, individualized pain therapies.

Nat Rev Drug Discov

Food and Drug Administration, Department of Health and Human Services, Rockville, Maryland, USA.

Published: September 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • Biomedical science has advanced our understanding of pain, but few new treatments targeting different pain mechanisms have been developed despite increased investment in pharmaceuticals.
  • Most recent pain medications are variations of existing opioids or anti-inflammatory drugs rather than truly novel therapies.
  • The text suggests that public-private partnerships (PPPs) could help advance innovative and safer pain treatments by applying new scientific knowledge.

Article Abstract

Biomedical science has greatly improved our understanding of pain in recent decades, but few novel molecular entities that address fundamentally new pain mechanisms have entered the clinic, despite dramatically increased pharmaceutical investment. Indeed, virtually all new analgesics approved over the past 25 years are derivatives or reformulations of opioids or aspirin-like drugs, existing drugs given for a new indication or older drugs given by a different route of administration. Here, we discuss factors contributing to this lack of innovation in therapies for pain and advocate public-private partnerships (PPPs) to translate new knowledge into more efficacious and safer treatments.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nrd2335DOI Listing

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