Drug repositioning is a drug discovery strategy in which an existing drug is utilized as a therapeutic agent for a different disease. As information regarding the safety, pharmacokinetics, and formulation of existing drugs is already available, the cost and time required for drug development is reduced. Conventional drug repositioning has been dominated by a method involving the search for candidate drugs that act on the target molecules of an organism in a diseased state through basic research. However, recently, information hosted on medical information and life science databases have been used in translational research to bridge the gap between basic research in drug repositioning and clinical application. Here, we review an example of d...
Drug repositioning (i.e., drug repurposing) is the process of discovering new uses for marketed drug...
Introduction: Drug repositioning implies finding new medical uses for existing drugs. It represents ...
Finding new uses for existing drugs, or drug repositioning, has been used as a strategy for decades ...
Drug repositioning is a drug discovery strategy in which an existing drug is utilized as a therapeut...
Recycling old drugs, rescuing shelved drugs and extending patents’ lives make drug repositioning an ...
Drug repositioning is a strategy to identify new uses for existing, approved, or research drugs that...
Drug discovery and development is an expensive, time-consuming, and risky enterprise. In order to ac...
Simple Summary Drug repurposing is an accelerated route for drug development and a promising approac...
Existing computational methods for drug repositioning either rely only on the gene expression respon...
Drug repositioning is the process of identifying novel therapeutic potentials for existing drugs and...
Drug repositioning is a powerful method that can assists the conventional drug discovery process by ...
13301甲第4406号博士(工学)金沢大学博士論文本文Full 以下に掲載:Journal of Biomedical Science and Engineering 9(1) pp.7-16 20...
Repositioning existing drugs for new therapeutic uses is an efficient approach to drug discovery. Ho...
Drug repositioning, exemplified by sildenafil and thalidomide, is a promising way to explore alterna...
Repurposing “old” drugs to treat both common and rare diseases is increasingly emerging as an attrac...
Drug repositioning (i.e., drug repurposing) is the process of discovering new uses for marketed drug...
Introduction: Drug repositioning implies finding new medical uses for existing drugs. It represents ...
Finding new uses for existing drugs, or drug repositioning, has been used as a strategy for decades ...
Drug repositioning is a drug discovery strategy in which an existing drug is utilized as a therapeut...
Recycling old drugs, rescuing shelved drugs and extending patents’ lives make drug repositioning an ...
Drug repositioning is a strategy to identify new uses for existing, approved, or research drugs that...
Drug discovery and development is an expensive, time-consuming, and risky enterprise. In order to ac...
Simple Summary Drug repurposing is an accelerated route for drug development and a promising approac...
Existing computational methods for drug repositioning either rely only on the gene expression respon...
Drug repositioning is the process of identifying novel therapeutic potentials for existing drugs and...
Drug repositioning is a powerful method that can assists the conventional drug discovery process by ...
13301甲第4406号博士(工学)金沢大学博士論文本文Full 以下に掲載:Journal of Biomedical Science and Engineering 9(1) pp.7-16 20...
Repositioning existing drugs for new therapeutic uses is an efficient approach to drug discovery. Ho...
Drug repositioning, exemplified by sildenafil and thalidomide, is a promising way to explore alterna...
Repurposing “old” drugs to treat both common and rare diseases is increasingly emerging as an attrac...
Drug repositioning (i.e., drug repurposing) is the process of discovering new uses for marketed drug...
Introduction: Drug repositioning implies finding new medical uses for existing drugs. It represents ...
Finding new uses for existing drugs, or drug repositioning, has been used as a strategy for decades ...