Maximizing the impact of microphysiological systems with in vitro–in vivo translation
Abstract
Microphysiological systems (MPS) hold promise for improving therapeutic drug approval rates by providing more physiological, human-based, in vitro assays for preclinical drug development activities compared to traditional in vitro and animal models. Here, we first summarize why MPSs are needed in pharmaceutical development, and examine how MPS technologies can be utilized to improve preclinical efforts. We then provide the perspective that the full impact of MPS technologies will be realized only when robust approaches for in vitro–in vivo (MPS-to-human) translation are developed and utilized, and explain how the burgeoning field of quantitative systems pharmacology (QSP) can fill that need.
- This article is part of the themed collections: Lab on a Chip Recent Review Articles, Lab on a Chip Recent Open Access Articles and Organ-, body- and disease-on-a-chip systems