RobinN
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Curious if this is how over time, a drug can possibly change effectiveness. Certainly, how one person might have more side effects or better results than another.
http://www.sciamdigital.com/index.c...LEID_CHAR=CBB6E9E4-2B35-221B-6561664A4F58CDA9Bugs and Drugs; November 2005; Scientific American Magazine; by Gunjan Sinha; 3 Page(s)
Last year scientists at drug giant Pfizer noticed something peculiar. Rats in a routine study were excreting unusually low levels of a metabolite in their urine called hippuric acid. It was a metabolic oddity that could throw off further laboratory results. So the scientists dug deeper. The rats had been reared at the same facility in Raleigh, N.C., as another group. The metabolite levels should have all been the same. But curiously, the rats in question had been bred in one particular room. Further investigation turned up an unlikely culprit--the rats carried a unique composition of gut microorganisms that had altered their metabolism.
"That was really a surprise," remarks Lora C. Robosky, principal scientist at Pfizer. Robosky is part of a team at the company investigating how spectroscopy and pattern-recognition software could analyze metabolites in body fluids--called metabonomics--to better select drug compounds. Along the way, the technology has revealed a factor often overlooked as a source of individual responses to drugs--gut microflora.