Not Your Grandparents’ Drugs: How Approved Drugs Have Evolved Since the 70’s
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The "New Drugs on the Horizon" sessions at the AACR Annual Meeting 2024 in San Diego revealed twelve innovative oncology agents and offered attendees a first look at their structures and preliminary data as they enter/progress in the clinic. In case you missed any of these exciting compounds – including selective CDK inhibitors, molecular glues, bifunctional degraders, a radiopharmaceutical, a bifunctional antibody, and an ADC – this article covers the structures and targets disclosed. A separate session disclosed the structure of a pan-RAS isoform inhibitor with remarkable clinical results.
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The team reviews hundreds of compounds from thousands of papers, press releases, and other sources each month to select candidates for Molecules of the Month. Here we have compiled a table of >70 additional molecules that were of interest in January 2024 along with highlights from some of our favorites, including molecules targeting SOS1, NLRP3, SMARCA2, and more.
2023 Molecules of the Year: Nominate!
The final set of Molecules of the Month for 2023 is out, and now it’s time to nominate your favorite molecules for 2023’s Molecules of the Year! Nominees should have either been first disclosed in 2023 or had a major new update in 2023 (e.g. clinical trial readout, publication, business transaction, approval). The molecule must have a [...]
From Lab to Leadership: Shaping the Next Generation of Drug Hunters
The impact of small and mid-sized biotech companies has become increasingly important. The shift from large pharma dominance to a biotech-driven era of drug discovery presents challenges to the traditional model of education for emerging medicinal chemists. Industry leader Dean Brown recently highlighted challenges for modern medicinal chemists starting in biotech who face fewer mentoring opportunities and are often propelled into leadership positions sooner than their counterparts in big pharma. Here we share how our team of former industry scientists at Drug Hunter can help.
Drug-Induced Liver Injury: A Medicinal Chemist’s Perspective
DILI is a leading cause of acute liver failure, accounting for half of these cases and often resulting in drug withdrawals. Understanding and managing DILI risk as a medicinal chemist involves exploring the intricate interplay among properties and structural features. In this article, we provide a medicinal chemist's perspective on the current understanding of DILI mechanisms, highlight cutting-edge assay developments for a holistic assessment, and discuss strategies for predicting DILI risks.