Publication | Open Access
Qualifying a human Liver-Chip for predictive toxicology: Performance assessment and economic implications
36
Citations
40
References
2021
Year
Unknown Venue
Performance AssessmentBiostatisticsToxicologyHepatotoxicityIq ConsortiumLaboratory MedicineQualification GuidelinesDrug Development PipelinesPreclinical Drug EvaluationPredictive ToxicologyLiver PhysiologyBiomedical AnalysisDrug DevelopmentPharmacologyDrug-induced Liver InjuryHepatologyHepatitisAcute Liver FailureLiver DiseaseMedicineHuman Liver-chipDrug DiscoveryPharmaceutical ResearchQuantitative Pharmacology
Abstract Human organ-on-a-chip (Organ-Chip) technology has the potential to disrupt preclinical drug discovery and improve success in drug development pipelines as it can recapitulate organ-level pathophysiology and clinical responses. The Innovation and Quality (IQ) consortium formed by multiple pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies to confront this challenge has published guidelines that define criteria for qualifying preclinical models, however, systematic and quantitative evaluation of the predictive value of Organ-Chips has not yet been reported. Here, 870 Liver-Chips were analyzed to determine their ability to predict drug-induced liver injury (DILI) caused by small molecules identified as benchmarks by the IQ consortium. The Liver-Chip met the qualification guidelines across a blinded set of 27 known hepatotoxic and non-toxic drugs with a sensitivity of 87% and a specificity of 100%. A computational economic value analysis suggests that with this performance the Liver-Chip could generate $3 billion annually for the pharmaceutical industry due to increased R&D productivity.
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