Virtual Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics: Near or Distant?
Sunday April 07, 2019
3:00 pm
-
5:00 pm
Eastern Time (ET)
Room W206 C
BEH
CVP
DDD
DMDD
MP
DPE
TCP
Chair :
C. Anthony Hunt
University of California, San Francisco
Given a plausible mechanism-based explanation of a pharmacological phenomenon, it is now feasible to build a virtual version of that explanation in software. The model mechanism and its generated phenomenon can be incrementally improved to become strongly analogous to actual counterparts. By so doing, we open a door to designing and conducting scientifically useful virtual experiments. The symposium will provide three examples of early stage virtual pharmacology, physiology, and therapeutics; show how the approach and methods can become scientifically and clinically productive; and describe how methods and tools are being adapted from engineering domains to improve transparency and credibility.
Speakers
Denise Kirschner
- University of Michigan Medical School
A Multi-scale Systems Pharmacology Approach to Virtual Therapeutics: Optimizing Drugs, Regimens and Dosing
Gary An
- University of Vermont
Systems Pharmacology as a Complex Control Problem: The Role of Simulation-aided Design
C. Anthony Hunt
- University of California, San Francisco
Exploring Plausible Virtual Model Mechanisms that Better Explain Acetaminophen Hepatotoxicity
Jon Timmis
- University of York
Engineering Scientifically Productive Biological Simulations: Tools and Methods from Systems Safety Engineering to Facilitate Translation