Roland Loosen
Bayer
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Publication
Featured researches published by Roland Loosen.
Frontiers in Physiology | 2011
Thomas Eissing; Lars Kuepfer; Corina Becker; Michael Block; Katrin Coboeken; Thomas Gaub; Linus Goerlitz; Juergen Jaeger; Roland Loosen; Bernd Ludewig; Michaela Meyer; Christoph Niederalt; Michael Sevestre; Hans-Ulrich Siegmund; Juri Solodenko; Kirstin Thelen; Ulrich Telle; Wolfgang Weiss; Thomas Wendl; Stefan Willmann; Joerg Lippert
Today, in silico studies and trial simulations already complement experimental approaches in pharmaceutical R&D and have become indispensable tools for decision making and communication with regulatory agencies. While biology is multiscale by nature, project work, and software tools usually focus on isolated aspects of drug action, such as pharmacokinetics at the organism scale or pharmacodynamic interaction on the molecular level. We present a modeling and simulation software platform consisting of PK-Sim® and MoBi® capable of building and simulating models that integrate across biological scales. A prototypical multiscale model for the progression of a pancreatic tumor and its response to pharmacotherapy is constructed and virtual patients are treated with a prodrug activated by hepatic metabolization. Tumor growth is driven by signal transduction leading to cell cycle transition and proliferation. Free tumor concentrations of the active metabolite inhibit Raf kinase in the signaling cascade and thereby cell cycle progression. In a virtual clinical study, the individual therapeutic outcome of the chemotherapeutic intervention is simulated for a large population with heterogeneous genomic background. Thereby, the platform allows efficient model building and integration of biological knowledge and prior data from all biological scales. Experimental in vitro model systems can be linked with observations in animal experiments and clinical trials. The interplay between patients, diseases, and drugs and topics with high clinical relevance such as the role of pharmacogenomics, drug–drug, or drug–metabolite interactions can be addressed using this mechanistic, insight driven multiscale modeling approach.
Frontiers in Physiology | 2013
Christoph Niederalt; Thomas Wendl; Lars Kuepfer; Karina Claassen; Roland Loosen; Stefan Willmann; Joerg Lippert; Marcus Schultze-Mosgau; Julia Winkler; Rolf Burghaus; Matthias Bräutigam; Hubertus Pietsch; Philipp Lengsfeld
A physiologically based kidney model was developed to analyze the renal excretion and kidney exposure of hydrophilic agents, in particular contrast media, in rats. In order to study the influence of osmolality and viscosity changes, the model mechanistically represents urine concentration by water reabsorption in different segments of kidney tubules and viscosity dependent tubular fluid flow. The model was established using experimental data on the physiological steady state without administration of any contrast media or drugs. These data included the sodium and urea concentration gradient along the cortico-medullary axis, water reabsorption, urine flow, and sodium as well as urea urine concentrations for a normal hydration state. The model was evaluated by predicting the effects of mannitol and contrast media administration and comparing to experimental data on cortico-medullary concentration gradients, urine flow, urine viscosity, hydrostatic tubular pressures and single nephron glomerular filtration rate. Finally the model was used to analyze and compare typical examples of ionic and non-ionic monomeric as well as non-ionic dimeric contrast media with respect to their osmolality and viscosity. With the computational kidney model, urine flow depended mainly on osmolality, while osmolality and viscosity were important determinants for tubular hydrostatic pressure and kidney exposure. The low diuretic effect of dimeric contrast media in combination with their high intrinsic viscosity resulted in a high viscosity within the tubular fluid. In comparison to monomeric contrast media, this led to a higher increase in tubular pressure, to a reduction in glomerular filtration rate and tubular flow and to an increase in kidney exposure. The presented kidney model can be implemented into whole body physiologically based pharmacokinetic models and extended in order to simulate the renal excretion of lipophilic drugs which may also undergo active secretion and reabsorption.
Archive | 2002
Bahman Sarabi; Thomas Mrziglod; Klaus Salewski; Roland Loosen; Martin Wanders
Archive | 2005
Bernhard Knab; Joerg Lippert; Roland Loosen; Andreas Schuppert; Michael Sevestre; Juri Solodenko; Stefan Willmann
Archive | 2002
Roland Loosen; Thomas Mrziglod; Martin Wanders; Klaus Salewski; Bahman Sarabi
Archive | 2002
Bahman Sarabi; Thomas Mrziglod; Klaus Salewski; Roland Loosen; Martin Wanders
Archive | 2002
Jürgen Flecke; Roland Loosen; Thomas Mrziglod; Klaus Salewski; Bahman Sarabi; Martin Wanders
Archive | 2002
Klaus Salewski; Thomas Mrziglod; Martin Wanders; Roland Loosen; Jürgen Flecke; Bahman Sarabi
Chemie Ingenieur Technik | 1998
Ludger Brüll; Ulrich Pallaske; Roland Loosen
Archive | 2002
Roland Loosen; Thomas Mrziglod; Klaus Salewski; Bahman Sarabi; Martin Wanders