This spring, the Duchenne muscular dystrophy community
rejoiced when PTC Therapeutics of South Plainfield, N.J., announced
that an experimental drug aimed at the disease had passed safety tests
in human volunteers and would now be tested in boys with DMD.
This drug, like many others, was successfully tested
in mice lacking dystrophin, the protein that’s also missing in
the human form of the disease.
But scientists studying DMD are also aware that other
treatments that have looked good in the dystrophin-deficient mouse haven’t
done as well when tried in people.
So, what can mice — let alone fruit flies, worms,
fish and a few cells — tell us about human disease?
Can a mouse with a genetic mutation that causes the
same protein deficiency that exists in Duchenne MD, but not the same
muscle weakness, predict how children with the disease will respond
to an experimental drug?
As with most complex problems, the answers are yes,
no, maybe and sometimes.
Can't You Just Test It in People?
Sometimes people with rapidly progressive, life-threatening
conditions want to know why they can’t volunteer to be "guinea
pigs" for compounds that haven’t yet been tested in any organism.
They feel they have "nothing to lose."
To that question, Robert Temple, director of the Office
of Medical Policy at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, answers
that there are treatments that can make a disease worse, as
well as those that might make it better or not change it at all.
"We believe that even someone with a dreadful disease
probably doesn’t want to die tomorrow," Temple says.
|
 |
|
|
Fruit
flies, such as this one, as well as worms,
fish and squid, can answer some questions
about drug effects in humans. |
|
Although there are situations in which drugs are fast-tracked
into human testing, establishing some minimal safety assurance in animals
is always required for a new drug in the United States. That doesn’t
mean animals are perfect replicas of humans and their diseases, or that
harm resulting from a new drug can be completely predicted and avoided.
It’s just a minimum standard to which U.S. researchers are expected
to adhere.
As they say about democracy, "It’s not perfect,
but it’s the best form of government we have." That’s
the way most researchers and government regulators feel about animal
and other lab-based "models" of human disease.
"The amount of animal data initially required before
studies can be conducted in human beings is quite modest," Temple
says, adding that the extent to which animal research slows drug development
is small.
Safety First
Typically, when a company applies for approval for a
new, previously untested drug, the FDA requires short-term testing in
animals prior to beginning human testing, just to make sure there are
no glaring safety issues.
Long-term testing in animals then generally continues
and may overlap with the first human test, called a phase 1 clinical trial. Phase 1 trials are small and are designed to measure
safety and toxic effects, sometimes in healthy volunteers and sometimes
in people with the targeted disorder. (Test compounds that have a high
likelihood of injuring healthy volunteers but may help patients —
for instance, those that change genetic information — are studied
in affected patients, even in phase 1.)
Phase 2 studies continue to test safety but also look
at the effectiveness of the compound in people with the disorder. Phase
3 studies are large-scale trials in people.
Russell Katz, director of the FDA’s Division of
Neuropharmacological Drug Products, admits that animal and cellular
models aren’t perfect replicas of diseases. But, he says, "There
has to be some minimum attention paid to figuring out what the risks
might be before we study the human experience. Even though some diseases
are terrible, there are also potential risks. People can be harmed by
drugs, and we think the best way we can try to predict that is to first
put the drug into animals."
Toxicity, he says, may have to be assessed in both a
rodent and a nonrodent model, such as a dog or monkey, while some other
drug effects may lend themselves to evaluation in species as far from
the human as the giant squid.
Katz says the animal experiments don’t even have
to prove a treatment is absolutely safe, let alone effective, before
the FDA allows researchers to try it in humans. Sometimes, the animal
experiments just point investigators toward potential problems so they
know what to monitor when they test a drug in people.
Relating a story of a new epilepsy drug that unexpectedly
damaged a nerve sheath in the brains of lab animals, he says, "That
was a case where you would never have known that there might be something.
It isn’t necessarily true that when animals give you a signal,
you find it in people. But it’s the only way we have of knowing
how to look, and where."
Usually, the FDA works with the drug’s developers
to make sure potential problems can be spotted during the human trial.
In most cases, Katz says, "the problem is solved in one way or
another. You can figure out a way to monitor for the toxicity, or you
may find out that the problem is due to a metabolite that the animal
makes that the human doesn’t make."
Rarely do animal safety issues stop an experimental
treatment from ever being tested in people. "Today’s crazy
idea may be tomorrow’s Nobel Prize-winning discovery," Katz
says.
Why Not Use a Computer?
While some people want drug testing to proceed directly
to people, others urge the use of computers (in silico models) or cells
in a dish (in vitro models) to predict human responses, thereby saving
time and money and avoiding injury to animals.
Unfortunately, although some scientific questions can
be answered by experiments on cells alone or even with computer models,
most complex questions require studying a whole organism. No computer
or tissue sample can replicate an animal’s metabolic, immunologic
or cardiovascular response to a drug, or evaluate a drug’s potential
to cause cancer.
Dealing With Differences
There are differences — as well as startling similarities
— between, say, rodents and human beings, says Gregory Cox, associate
staff scientist at the Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine, that
must be dealt with when drugs are tested. (Jackson is a nonprofit genetics
research facility that also supplies approximately 2,000 varieties of
mice to labs and universities all over the world.)
Compensating for Size and Scale
A frequent criticism of the mdx mouse, a model for
human Duchenne muscular dystrophy (see "The Tale
of the mdx Mouse,"), is that "outwardly, they really don’t
look that sick," Cox says. (The inexperienced researcher who’s
testing a treatment in this mouse and expects to see a change in strength
before and after it’s given may not see much and may erroneously
conclude that the drug doesn’t do anything.)
Cox believes the difference in weakness in human and
mouse DMD is related to the scale of the stresses on human and mouse
muscles. "Dystrophin does the same thing in mice as in humans,"
he says. "And the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex [a cluster of
proteins in the cell membrane] is the same."
To stress mouse muscles in a way that’s comparable
to what human muscles undergo, he says, you have to do things like put
the mice on a downhill treadmill — a stressful environment for
the leg muscles — and videotape changes in their gait. Additional
devices, such as transparent treadmills that allow a scientist to view
the mouse from below, and automated gait analysis provided by a computer,
can also help.
"The mdx mouse has a huge number of advantages
and is quite a good model genetically and biochemically," Cox says.
"If you take a muscle biopsy, you can see that the mice have muscular
dystrophy. There’s no obvious difference between them and a young
muscular dystrophy patient."
Adjusting for Metabolic Rates
"I think some of the biggest differences are in
the metabolism of drugs," Cox says, referring to the process by
which enzymes in the liver alter a medication’s chemical structure.
A drug that may last hours or days in the human bloodstream may only
last minutes in mice because of their very high metabolic rate, he says,
even though the drug may act the same way in all other respects.
"If the active compound is in the animal at the
same level as it is in a person, it usually has the same action,"
Cox says. "The problem can be getting it to that level." To
do that, he says, investigators need to use innovative strategies, such
as putting a tiny pump under the mouse’s skin that infuses the
drug continuously, or even breeding mice that have human drug-metabolizing
enzymes.
 |
|
Lab
mice are exposed to the same environment and
food and usually have the same genetic background,
making their response to a test drug likely
to be the same. Humans, in contrast, live
in different environments, ingest a variety
of substances, and have diverse genetic backgrounds,
so their responses to a test drug are less
likely to be uniform. A drug with a very weak
benefit may look much better in mice than
it does in humans, where background differences
may override its effect. |
|
Factoring in 'Reality'
Sometimes drug trials using lab animals are conducted
under conditions that are so ideal that they uncover very small, nonmeaningful
differences in the treated and untreated groups.
Real-world factors in human trials create far more variation
than scientists see in the lab.
With animal model trials, Cox explains, you "control
all the variables. None of the mice fail to complete the study. There
are no compliance issues and no lifestyle issues."
Mice don’t smoke, drink or take other medications
during the study. Even their genetic background can be strictly controlled
and kept exactly the same — certainly not the case in human studies.
When treated mice in this kind of trial survive a few
days or weeks longer than the untreated mice, "everybody hopes
that difference will scale up to years in patients. Unfortunately, that’s
often false logic," Cox says.
"Just because something is statistically significant
doesn’t necessarily mean it’s clinically relevant,"
he continues. "You can get statistical significance [showing that
a perceived difference is not just due to chance] in a model system
by detecting subtle differences and saying they’re important.
"But just being able to say the difference is unlikely
to be due to chance doesn’t make it big enough to merit attention."
Cox says people should get excited when researchers
find major effects in animal models, using reliable testing methods.
"If you’re hitting a specific disease mechanism,
it’s going to have a dramatic impact on the outcome," he
says. |