Greeting from the President
|
![]() |
I am hereby sending greetings to all the members
of this Society as I have assumed the Predident of this Society from January
of 2004 because of the expiration of the Predident of Prof. Tetsuya Kamataki
according to the rules of this Society. Since its inception of the Japanese Society for the Study of Xenobiotics in 1985, this year will be the 19th year, and through the holdings of annual meeting, workshops, etc., we have made progresses as the forums of presenting research results, learning and enlightenment, of scientists who are interested in pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics. In response to the development and profound advances of the relevant life science, the research results presented in the annual meetings of this Society have always been at the cutting edge of the time and led the world in the pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics fields. Now we are facing the great changes. Today when the human genome analysis
has been completed, the FDA in the USA made public, in November of 2003,
a draft proposing the importance of pharmacogenomics as indices for efficacy
and safety of drugs with an aim of establishing personalized medicine,
and has indicated an administrative guideline in that it may request
a pharmaceutical company, etc. to provide data on the influences of gene
polymorphisms such as drug metabolyzing enzymes, transporters, and receptors
as biomarkers which may become the causes for inter-individual variability
in developing a new drug. This draft has given great impacts not only
to pharmaceutical companies in the world but also to those in Japan.
With respect to the pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic changes which these
gene polymorphisms exert, our members who had insights reported and communicated
their research results to the world in the early years. We are proud
of the fact that this Society has played advanced and pioneering roles
in pharmacogenomics. To our regret, however, we are currently yet to
obtain understandings of Japanese people in utilization of human samples
and in some types of human trials required for carrying out and accelerating
new drug development, and promotions of personalized medicine by use
of biomarkers such as gene polymorphisms. We believe that the mission
of this Society is to actively render assistance for obtaining this understanding
from Japanese people and government. Furthermore, I would like to strengthen the management of the secretariat for the membership services, and promotions of concrete activities of the management committee as an advisory organization to the chairman, and each of our committees, which our previous chairman, Prof. Kamataki, had pursued. I would like to ask all the members to cooperate with us and understand our endeavors. Akira Tsuji |
|