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by stenl
1664 days ago
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Assuming you have found a drug that is safe and binds the target in the intended way (which itself can take years), you then have to manufacture it according to GMP standards. That takes at least a year and $1 million. Next, you have to run toxicity and pharmacokinetics (how the drug is absorbed and distributed in the body) in two different animal models. That takes 6-12 months and $1-2 million. Then you apply for permission to start phase I trials, and wait for the green light. One reason RNA drugs are so exciting is that their manufacture is simple and can be standardized, cutting the GMP manufacturing step to a few weeks instead of a year or more. Small-molecule drugs are ”bespoke” in that each needs its own, different, manufacturing process. In contrast, all RNA molecules are essentially chemically identical, differing only in the ordering of the nucleotides. |
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