| Literature DB >> 28199324 |
Adrian J Carter1, Amy Donner2, Wen Hwa Lee3, Chas Bountra3.
Abstract
Discovering new medicines is difficult and increasingly expensive. The pharmaceutical industry has responded to this challenge by embracing open innovation to access external ideas. Historically, partnerships were usually bilateral, and the drug discovery process was shrouded in secrecy. This model is rapidly changing. With the advent of the Internet, drug discovery has become more decentralised, bottom-up, and scalable than ever before. The term open innovation is now accepted as just one of many terms that capture different but overlapping levels of openness in the drug discovery process. Many pharmaceutical companies recognise the advantages of revealing some proprietary information in the form of results, chemical tools, or unsolved problems in return for valuable insights and ideas. For example, such selective revealing can take the form of openly shared chemical tools to explore new biological mechanisms or by publicly admitting what is not known in the form of an open call. The essential ingredient for addressing these problems is access to the wider scientific crowd. The business of crowdsourcing, a form of outsourcing in which individuals or organisations solicit contributions from Internet users to obtain ideas or desired services, has grown significantly to fill this need and takes many forms today. Here, we posit that open-innovation approaches are more successful when they establish a reliable framework for converting creative ideas of the scientific crowd into practice with actionable plans.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28199324 PMCID: PMC5331949 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.2001387
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
Fig 1Lighting up the discovery of new medicines with the power of the crowd.
Bilateral academic collaborations, crowdsourcing platforms, and PPPs are different approaches for bringing together industry, non-profit organisations, academic scientists, government bodies, charities, and patient groups in different combinations in order to identify bigger and brighter ideas for new medicines based on the power of the scientific crowd.
Fig 2Attrition numbers for InnoCentive challenges from solver registration to potential collaboration.
Boehringer Ingelheim has instigated 12 open crowdsourcing calls with InnoCentive that cover a wide range of topics, ranging from studying new translational models of psychiatric disease, to new approaches for the in vivo modulation of gene expression in lymphocytes, and to mimicking smooth muscle remodelling in severe asthma. A total of 2,169 solvers have registered themselves at the InnoCentive website in response to these calls and have provided more than 361 solutions, of which 33 have won awards, and 16 potential collaborations have been identified (status as of 12 December 2016).
A comparison of the different biomedical crowdsourcing approaches.
| Crowdsourcing approach | Examples | Potential reward |
|---|---|---|
| Precompetitive PPP | SGC, Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Consortium, International HapMap Project, Innovative Medicines Initiative | Sharing of results, scientific recognition, early access to tools and biomarkers, shared methods and standards |
| Commercial platforms | Kaggle, NineSigma, InnoCentive | Successful solvers receive monetary prizes, potential for bilateral collaborations |
| Innovation centre or incubator | BioMed X | Employment, laboratory, and supporting infrastructure in an innovation centre |
| Corporate pharmaceutical platforms | GSK (Discover Fast Track) Bayer (Grants4Targets) | Successful solvers receive monetary prizes, potential bilateral collaborations, and/or access to drug discovery resources at the pharmaceutical company |