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Vol. 26, Issue 12, 1217-1222, December 1998
Laboratory for Cancer Research, College of Pharmacy, Rutgers, The
State University of New Jersey
One of the most challenging research areas in pharmacology in the
new millennium is to understand why individuals respond differently to
drug therapy and to what extent that individual variability in
disposition is responsible for the observed differences in therapeutic
efficacy and adverse reactions. To answer these complex questions,
drug-metabolism research will rely on multidisciplinary approaches more
than ever to investigate the many components involved in drug
metabolism and disposition. Major research challenges include the
following: (1) the genetic variation of drug targets (receptors,
enzymes, etc.), drug transporters (multispecific organic anion transporter, P-glycoprotein, alpha-1-acid glycoprotein, etc.), and drug-metabolizing enzymes (cytochrome P450s and
other enzymes); (2) the structure and function of all genetic variants of drug receptors, transporters, and metabolizing enzymes; (3) the
induction, repression, and inhibition of all components involved in
drug disposition; (4) the development of noninvasive in
vivo methods to determine the physiological significance of
various components in the handling of specific therapeutic agents in
humans; (5) the mechanism of idiosyncratic adverse drug reactions; and (6) the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic relationships to explain the individual differences in therapeutic efficacy and drug safety. Thus successful drug-metabolism research in the new millennium must
integrate receptor biology, enzymology, recombinant DNA technology, biochemical toxicology, and drug disposition into study design and
conduct balanced in vitro and in vivo
experiments to allow a full understanding of the mechanisms of
individual variability in drug therapy and drug safety.
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