4.5 Review

Application of Micro-Engineered Kidney, Liver, and Respiratory System Models to Accelerate Preclinical Drug Testing and Development

Journal

BIOENGINEERING-BASEL
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering9040150

Keywords

organ-on-chip; metabolism; toxicology; drug transport; body-on-chip; disease-on-chip; drug discovery

Funding

  1. NHMRC [APP1173363]

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This article discusses the application of in vitro human organ models in preclinical drug testing. Conventional in vitro tissue models and animal models have failed to accurately predict the clinical success of new therapies. Organ-on-chip technology provides realistic tissue models that mimic the physiological characteristics of human organs and has been successfully applied in drug testing.
Developing novel drug formulations and progressing them to the clinical environment relies on preclinical in vitro studies and animal tests to evaluate efficacy and toxicity. However, these current techniques have failed to accurately predict the clinical success of new therapies with a high degree of certainty. The main reason for this failure is that conventional in vitro tissue models lack numerous physiological characteristics of human organs, such as biomechanical forces and biofluid flow. Moreover, animal models often fail to recapitulate the physiology, anatomy, and mechanisms of disease development in human. These shortfalls often lead to failure in drug development, with substantial time and money spent. To tackle this issue, organ-on-chip technology offers realistic in vitro human organ models that mimic the physiology of tissues, including biomechanical forces, stress, strain, cellular heterogeneity, and the interaction between multiple tissues and their simultaneous responses to a therapy. For the latter, complex networks of multiple-organ models are constructed together, known as multiple-organs-on-chip. Numerous studies have demonstrated successful application of organ-on-chips for drug testing, with results comparable to clinical outcomes. This review will summarize and critically evaluate these studies, with a focus on kidney, liver, and respiratory system-on-chip models, and will discuss their progress in their application as a preclinical drug-testing platform to determine in vitro drug toxicology, metabolism, and transport. Further, the advances in the design of these models for improving preclinical drug testing as well as the opportunities for future work will be discussed.

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