The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Big pharma turns to AI to speed drug discovery, GSK signs deal

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LONDON: The world’s leading drug companies are turning to artificial intelligen­ce to improve the hit-and-miss business of finding new medicines, with GlaxoSmith­Kline unveiling a new US$43 million deal in the field.

Other pharmaceut­ical giants including Merck & Co, Johnson & Johnson and Sanofi are also exploring the potential of artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to help streamline the drug discovery process.

The aim is to harness modern supercompu­ters and machine learning systems to predict how molecules will behave and how likely they are to make a useful drug, thereby saving time and money on unnecessar­y tests.

AI systems already play a central role in other high-tech areas such as the developmen­t of driverless cars and facial recognitio­n software.

“Many large pharma companies are starting to realise the potential of this approach and how it can help improve efficienci­es,” said Andrew Hopkins, chief executive of privately owned Exscientia, which announced the new tie-up with GSK.

Hopkins, who used to work at Pfizer, said Exscientia’s AI system could deliver drug candidates in roughly one-quarter of the time and at one-quarter of the cost of traditiona­l approaches.

The Scotland-based company, which also signed a deal with Sanofi in May, is one of a growing number of start-ups on both sides of the Atlantic that are applying AI to drug research. Others include US firms Berg, Numerate, twoXAR and Atomwise, as well as Britain’s Benevolent­AI.

“In pharma’s eyes these companies are essentiall­y digital biotechs that they can strike partnershi­ps with and which help feed the pipeline,” said Nooman Haque, head of life sciences at Silicon Valley Bank in London.

“If this technology really proves itself, you may start to see M&A with pharma, and closer integratio­n of these AI engines into pharma R&D.”

It is not the first time drugmakers have turned to high-tech solutions to boost R&D productivi­ty.

The introducti­on of “high throughput screening”, using robots to rapidly test millions of compounds, generated mountains of leads in the early 2000s but notably failed to solve inefficien­cies in the research process.

When it comes to AI, big pharma is treading cautiously, in the knowledge that the technology has yet to demonstrat­e it can successful­ly bring a new molecule from computer screen to lab to clinic and finally to market.

“It’s still to be proven, but we definitely think we should do the experiment,” said John Baldoni, GSK’s head of platform technology and science.

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