GREY:ATBPF - Post by User
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TriumphSpitSixon Nov 04, 2022 12:30am
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Post# 35072007
RE:There we are ...
RE:There we are ..."Just wish we really understood what "significant dose reduction" meant and how it affects Acute and Chronic drug development. Acute is easy to understand but how the dose reduction affects a Chronic plan is anyone's guess."
Not a doctor or chemist but from reading the NR, I believe it is primarily related to an increase in "bioavailability" i.e., how much of the drug actually enters circulation within the body and is then available to reduce pain, inflammation, etc... Presumably, higher bioavailability would allow them to decrease the doses in both Chronic and Acute applications since more of the drug is actually utilized instead of being flushed out of the body.
Hopefully, lowering the dose would address the "elevated LTEs" which doomed the Ph.2 chronic study.
Maybe they combined it with something else or found a way to treat it to make it more soluble? Dunno, just thinking out loud...