Neurological conditions are inherently complex and represent some of the most challenging diseases.
One particular challenge is the inability to easily biopsy tissue from the brain.
Advancements in biomarkers and medical imaging have been instrumental to groundbreaking research, clinical trials and treatment breakthroughs for neurological diseases.
Neuroimaging is often used in combination with fluid biomarkers from samples such as plasma and cerebrospinal fluid.
Together, they provide a window into the brain, helping answer key questions regarding disease biology and providing insight into if and how investigational medicines are working.
In the research and development of new medicines, neuroimaging can help determine important therapeutic properties, such as the ability of the medicine to get to the right place in the brain, whether the medicine is engaging the intended target, how much of the target is being engaged and how the medicine is affecting the target.
Two imaging technologies are especially notable in neuroscience research and development.
Magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, is primarily used to reveal the structure of the brain and positron emission tomography, or PET, is used to visualize molecular properties and processes.
MRI creates detailed images of the brain by leveraging the fact that different tissues contain varying amounts of water. By using a strong magnetic field and radiofrequency waves to manipulate the water molecules, MRI produces detailed images of different tissue types.
Researchers can use these images to understand changes in the brain that may occur due to neurological conditions or as a response to a medicine.
PET can directly track therapeutics as they move through and affect the brain, which allows for a detailed understanding of how the medicine might affect the body and disease.
This is done at BMS by creating tracer molecules and modified versions of medicines that have a radioactive atom attached. The radioactive atom is created with a cyclotron or particle accelerator and attached to a tracer molecule or the medicine being studied.
The resulting molecules, called radioligands, can then be followed throughout the brain via PET scanners, as small particles called positrons are emitted.
The ability to create radioligands with an in-house cyclotron is a unique capability and enables BMS to accelerate the discovery and development of new medicines.
Neuroimaging has a wide-ranging impact on both neuroscience research and clinical trials, which results in significant time and cost savings.
As the field enters a new era in neuroscience, Bristol Myers Squibb continues to pursue bold science to deliver meaningful therapies for patients.
We are motivated by the rapid evolution of scientific knowledge within neuroscience, which we are using to discover, develop, and deliver transformative medicines for some of the most challenging diseases of our time.