Reptiles, Treatments, and Cell-Gene Therapy with Dr. Vick
Description
Summary
Dr. Andy Vick shares some of the things that surprised him throughout his career and he discusses his passion for reptiles and his experience discussing the pharmaceutical potential of venom with future toxicologists at Ashland University. Next, Andrew Vick discusses his role as an adjunct professor at Ohio State University, his involvement in academia, and how he got into it. We discuss a story about a clinical study that restored hearing in children with gene therapy. The conversation concludes with a discussion about the impact of professional organizations like AAPS on the industry and the importance of networking and fellowship.
Takeaways
Cancer doesn’t have the same death sentence - fear factor it used to have 30+ years ago.
It takes about 10 years for a newly discovered compound to make it on the market.
Andrew Vick is passionate about reptiles and has a collection of rare reptiles. He enjoys educating others about reptiles and their pharmaceutical potential, particularly venom.
There’s a shift from small molecules to biologics in the past 5 years.
Andrew Vick visited Ashland University to discuss the pharmaceutical potential of venom with future toxicologists, combining his passion for reptiles and pharmaceutical science. Andrew Vick is an adjunct professor at Ohio State University, where he teaches in the College of Pharmacy Division of Pharmaceutical Chemistry.
His role as an adjunct professor involves giving guest lectures, providing career and professional development for students, and serving on the Dean's Corporate Council.
Andrew Vick is also involved in evaluating assets developed in academia and collaborating with industry to develop strategies for bringing products to the clinic.
We discuss a study by Regeneron that used gene therapy to restore hearing in children with mutations in the otoferlin gene.
Regarding Cell-Gene Therapy we have a lot to learn both from the positive pharmacological potential, but also from a safety and tolerability standpoint.
Professional organizations like AAPS play a crucial role in networking and fellowship, providing opportunities for collaboration and learning in the pharmaceutical industry.
Sound Bites
"I have just a passion for reptiles and have accumulated a small and pretty rare collection of reptiles from around the world."
“It's probably a good 10 years from the glimmer in a biochemist's eyes to on the market.”
“There’s a logarithmic difference between great and good.”
“Just use your imagination on a way to tackle a disease and then find a way.”
“Cell and gene therapy opens the door to a whole different category of opportunities.”
“AAPS is just kind of part of my DNA.”
Chapters
00:21 - Surprises in Dr. Vick’s Career
02:24 - The Cyclical Nature of Technology
03:30 - Exploring the Pharmaceutical Potential of Venom
05:35 - Improvements in Cancer and Other Diseases In The Past 30 Years
10:13 - Educating Future Toxicologists about Reptiles and Pharmaceuticals
15:45 - Andrew Vick's Role as an Adjunct Professor at Ohio State University
21:21 - New News!! - Restoring Hearing in Children with Gene Therapy
27:27 - The Impact of Professional Organizations on the Industry, AAPS
New News Story: The 'little protein factory' that could: Regeneron gene therapy restores hearing in 2 children
How to reach us:
Dr. Andy Vick
https://www.linkedin.com/in/andy-vick-4467189/
Attralus: https://www.attralus.com/
Dr. Chad Briscoe
https://www.linkedin.com/in/chadbriscoe/
Celerion - https://www.celerion.com/
Gregory Austin
https://www.linkedin.com/in/gregoryaustin1/
ECI - https://eci-rx.com /
Image credits:
Pharmacognosy - https://pharmacognosy-phytochemistry-natural-products.pharmaceuticalconferences.com/events-list/industrial-pharmacognosy
#biotechnology #science #research #toxicology #reptiles #academia #cellgenetherapy #AAPS