Dr Dennis Smith worked in the pharmaceutical industry for 32 years after gaining his Ph.D from the University of Manchester. For 20 years he was at Pfizer Global Research and Development, Sandwich where he was Vice President-Pharmacokinetics, Dynamics and Metabolism. For the past 2 years he has been a Pfizer Academic Research Fellow working on a part-time basis. His research interests and publications span all aspects of Drug Discovery and Development particularly where drug metabolism knowledge can impact on the design of more efficacious and safer drugs. During this 30-year span he has helped in the Discovery and Development of eight marketed NCEs. He has authored over 100 publications including two books. Recent publications include:
Schmid, Esther F; Ashkenazy R.; Merson, J; Smith Dennis A. Will biomedical innovation change the future of healthcare? Drug Discovery Today (in Press, available as preview)
Smith, Dennis A.. Dogma driven science, the need to establish a common base line. Chemico-Biological Interactions (2009), 179(1), 68-70.
Smith, Dennis A.; Obach, R. Scott; Williams, Dominic P.; Park, B. Kevin. Clearing the MIST (metabolites in safety testing) of time: The impact of duration of administration on drug metabolite toxicity. Chemico-Biological Interactions (2009), 179(1), 60-67.
Smith, Dennis A.; Obach, R. Scott. Metabolites in Safety Testing (MIST): Considerations of Mechanisms of Toxicity with Dose, Abundance, and Duration of Treatment. Chemical Research in Toxicology (2009), 22(2), 267-279.
Fenner, Kath S.; Troutman, Matt D.; Kempshall, Sarah; Cook, Jack; Ware, Joe; Smith, Dennis A.; Lee, Caroline A. Drug–Drug Interactions Mediated Through P-Glycoprotein: Clinical Relevance and In Vitro–In Vivo Correlation Using Digoxin as a Probe Drug. Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics(2008) 85, 173-181
Smith, Dennis A.; Jones, Rhys M. The sulfonamide group as a structural alert: a distorted story? Current Opinion in Drug Discovery & Development (2008), 11(1), 72-79.
He is active in a teaching role holding appointments as Visiting Professor at the University of Liverpool and Honorary Senior Lecturer at the University of Aberdeen and lectures widely to students at several other Universities.
His wish in his work now is to have fun in the science and “to inspire another generation to take up the cudgel against disease”.
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