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Getting More from Drugs

Unusual combinations of existing drugs could improve treatments for a variety of diseases.

By Katherine Bourzac

Thursday, March 08, 2007

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A biotech company called CombinatoRx has found that at the right doses, thousands of counterintuitive drug pairs are synergistic. The Cambridge, MA, company has eight drug combinations in clinical trials and several more in preclinical development. In a few years, diabetics, instead of injecting insulin, might be prescribed a cholesterol drug and a pain medication to help control their blood sugar. People suffering from chronic pain might find relief through a combination of a steroid and an antidepressant, with fewer side effects than they experience with current therapies.

Pairing Drugs: The chart above shows how a combination of a steroid and a drug normally used for cardiovascular disease inhibits the inflammatory compounds that contribute to rheumatoid arthritis. The color of each square corresponds to the level of inhibition: dark blue represents the weakest inhibitory effect, light pink the strongest. The light-green band in the middle shows that relatively low doses of the two drugs can inhibit inflammation.
Credit: CombinoRx

Alexis Borisy, founder and CEO of the company, says his researchers take a brute-force approach to finding fruitful drug combinations. In the lab, they test combinations of several thousand drugs at several different doses on cellular models of diseases including cancer and arthritis--regardless of what diseases the drugs are currently approved for, if any. Then they feed the data into software that looks for synergies.

"We started the company based on theoretical ideas," says Borisy: that cellular pathways in the body are intricate and redundant, and that it should be possible to find powerful combinations of drugs that attack the same disease pathways in different ways. Other drug companies are testing combinations of drugs, but they usually try a pain drug with a pain drug, or a cancer drug with a cancer drug.

Borisy's company has found that drugs on the market for very different applications can have synergy, presumably because they are acting on the same networks of genes, proteins, and signaling molecules in cells. "We have found thousands of synergistic compounds we wouldn't have expected," says Borisy, Technology Review's 2003 Young Innovator. (See "TR35.")

For example, CombinatoRx has found several of what Borisy calls selective steroid amplifiers--drugs that, when given with steroids, amplify the latter's good effects and dampen their side-effects. The company has two drugs in phase II clinical trials that include the steroid prednisolone, which can cause weight gain and insomnia and destabilize the blood sugar, among other side effects. In one formulation, for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, a low dose of prednisolone is combined with a drug called dipyrimadole, which is normally used to prevent blood clots in patients with cardiovascular disease. In the second formulation, for the treatment of chronic pain, a low dose of prednisolone is combined with a low dose of an antidepressant (which also has side effects at higher doses).

Comments

  • business plan?
    How does this company expect to make money?  Once the useful combinations of drugs are publically known, can't any doctor prescribe them?
    Rate this comment: 12345

    jms017
    03/08/2007
    Posts:2
    • Re: business plan?
      When doctors prescribe an approved drug, drug companies make money. It seems you think it the other way round: beyond my comprehension. Can you reconcile?
      Rate this comment: 12345

      neovask
      03/08/2007
      Posts:6
      • Re: business plan?
        I got the sense from the article (though it wasn't specified) that they're testing drugs made by other companies. And I had the same question; how is CombinatoRx going to make money off their research? I mean, it's nice of them and all... but are they going to ask for donations from the people who use them, or what?
        Rate this comment: 12345

        Monsterboy
        03/09/2007
        Posts:72
        Avg Rating:
        4/5
      • Re: business plan?
        Obviously you're right: "drug companies" make money when drugs are proscribed.  My question was, how will _this_ company make money.  Maybe you think they have advance funding from the companies who have patents on the drugs which they're testing in new combinations?
        Rate this comment: 12345

        jms017
        03/12/2007
        Posts:2
        • Re: business plan?
          They can patent the combination product if it's can formulated into one pill. Big pharma does it all the time - eg Glaxo's Combivir for HIV, or Pfizer's desperate attempts to combine Lipitor with anything, to meet the threat of patent expiration in 2011. You could argue that doctors could write two separate prescriptions for the two products, and they do, but more often than not it's easier to prescribe the combination product, particularly if the patient is not that sensitive to the price - which is generally the case in European markets and for many US patients.
          Rate this comment: 12345

          johnmac69
          03/13/2007
          Posts:1

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