Poging GOUD - Vrij

The Key To A Precision Medicine Future: AI Plus Human Ingenuity

BioSpectrum Asia

|

BioSpectrum Asia April 2023

Artificial intelligence (AI) is being used to find new promising targets and design new molecules to treat diseases. It is also being applied in the optimisation of the clinical trial process – analysing data to predict outcomes to help prevent timely and costly late-stage failures, and producing health digital twins to speed up trials, and precision public health. It’s very possible to imagine a data-driven, streamlined, precision medicine future merging the best of human and machine intelligence to manage our individual health in ways we never previously imagined.

- Dr Alex Aliper

The Key To A Precision Medicine Future: AI Plus Human Ingenuity

Artificial intelligence (AI) is accelerating precision medicine, giving us the ability to analyse complex data sets and find patterns that can tell us how genes are linked to diseases, and how diseases are linked to biological processes. AI can process reams of existing scientific data and uncover new biomarkers for disease, new targets for therapeutics, and even design new drug-like molecules to treat disease. And we’re still in the early stages of what this technology can do.

Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) – machine learning models that create new images, video, and text from existing data – were first proposed in 2014 by a young scientist named Ian Goodfellow, currently with DeepMind. He and other scientists discovered that technology can be utilised to generate new images based on specific generation conditions. Now, this technology has exploded, bringing with it breakthroughs that have lately dominated headlines – from Microsoft’s new Copilot for Office, to Bing’s AI chatbot, to image- and art-generating tools like DALL-E and Midjourney.

Generative AI is an amazing tool that is quickly evolving to transform the way we create, work, and discover. What is often misunderstood, however, is the essential role that humans play in advancing these technologies. That’s particularly true in AI drug discovery, where we are working with diverse and complex datasets and an untold number of potential interactions and biological responses. Back in 2016, Insilico Medicine’s founder and CEO, Alex Zhavoronkov, PhD, was one of a few pioneers to realise the potential of generative AI in drug discovery. He published the first peer-reviewed paper in the emerging field of “generative chemistry” on applying GANs to generate novel small molecules against cancer.

MEER VERHALEN VAN BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Kyorin and Lunatus partner to launch Lasvic tablets in 9 Middle Eastern countries

Japan's Kyorin Pharmaceutical has entered into an exclusive distribution agreement with Lunatus Marketing & Consulting FZCO for Lasvic tablets (Lascufloxacin hydrochloride).

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Feb 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Biotium launches GlycoLiner Cell Surface Glycoprotein Labeling Kits

US-based Biotium, a leading innovator in fluorescent dyes and life science reagents, has announced the launch of GlycoLiner Cell Surface Glycoprotein Labeling Kits for rapid, selective, and covalent labeling of cell surface glycoproteins.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Feb 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Vaxxas appoints former Merck Global Vaccines President David Peacock as CEO

Australia-based Vaxxas has announced the appointment of global biopharmaceutical executive David Peacock as Chief Executive Officer (CEO) to lead the commercialisation of the company's proprietary high-density microarray patch (HD-MAP) vaccination technology.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Feb 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Thermo Fisher partners with NVIDIA leveraging AI to advance scientific instrumentation

US-based Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. has announced a strategic collaboration with NVIDIA to power artificial intelligence (AI)based solutions and laboratory automation at scale.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Feb 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Bruker consolidates ownership of TOFWERK in expansion of mass spectrometry portfolio

Bruker Corporation has announced the acquisition of an additional 60 per cent ownership stake in TOFWERK AG, a Switzerland-based innovator in ultra-fast time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometry technology for small molecule applied markets, consolidating Bruker's ownership to 100 per cent.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Feb 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

Bioengineered tissue by Japan emerges as revolutionary treatment for secondary lymphedema

A research team led by Associate Professor Kosuke Kusamori from the Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences at Tokyo University of Science (TUS), Japan, is pioneering an innovative technique for lymphatic tissue engineering that could revolutionize the treatment of secondary lymphedema.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Feb 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

Chitose and Fujifilm Biosciences to drive global innovation and biopharma manufacturing

Japan-based Chitose Laboratory Corp. & Fujifilm Biosciences Inc. have announced a new strategic alliance that leverages the strengths of both companies in advancing biopharmaceutical production.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Feb 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Vibrant Therapeutics on-boards Dr Han Lee as Co-CEO

Vibrant Therapeutics, a clinical-stage biotechnology company based in China and US, has announced the appointment of Dr Han Lee as co-chief executive officer (CEO).

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Feb 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

IIT-D and AIIMS develop swallowable microdevice for microbiome study

Researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi, and All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) have developed an ingestible device that can sample bacteria directly from the small intestine, opening a new window into the human gut microbiome.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Feb 2026

BioSpectrum Asia

BioSpectrum Asia

Ambitious research to develop multivalent vaccines against multiple deadly filoviruses

Scientists at the University of Oxford, in collaboration with partners, will spearhead the development of new vaccines that aim to provide comprehensive protection against multiple lethal filoviruses, including Ebola virus, Sudan virus, Bundibugyo virus, and Marburg virus.

time to read

1 min

BioSpectrum Asia Feb 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size