Repurposing – second life for drugs

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Abstract

Drug repurposing refers to finding new indications for existing drugs. The paradigm shift from traditional drug discovery to drug repurposing is driven by the fact that new drug pipelines are getting dried up because of mounting Research & Development (R&D)costs, long timeline for new drug development, low success rate for new molecular entities, regulatory hurdles coupled with revenueloss from patent expiry and competition from generics. Anaemic drug pipelines along with increasing demand for newer effective,cheaper, safer drugs and unmet medical needs call for new strategies of drug discovery and, drug repurposing seems to be a promisingavenue for such endeavours. Drug repurposing strategies have progressed over years from simple serendipitous observations tomore complex computational methods in parallel with our ever-growing knowledge on drugs, diseases, protein targets and signallingpathways but still the knowledge is far from complete. Repurposed drugs too have to face many obstacles, although lesser than newdrugs, before being successful

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APA

Ayyar, P., & Subramanian, U. (2022). Repurposing – second life for drugs. Pharmacia, 69(1), 51–59. https://doi.org/10.3897/PHARMACIA.69.E72548

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