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December 8, 2006

Incomplete Documentation in Pharmaceutical R&D Lab Notebooks

by @ 2:45 pm.  Filed under Science

I came across this excellent article in the Oct. issue of Scientific Computing and wanted to make people aware of it.

R&D’s Dirty Little Secret

This article by Robin Y. Smith comments on the elephant in the room for most pharmaceutical companies as well as fine chemicals companies in R&D. The problem is the incomplete and sloppy notebooks. This is the elephant in the room that no one wants to talk about.

He found, based on auditing 10 years of lab notebooks from a top 10 pharmaceutical company, that 15% of the pages had major problems such as being illegible, incomplete, or had some other error meaning the experiment could not be reproduced.

In some of the worst cases, 60% of the pages were deemed not reproducible and this did not count vague phrases such as “worked up in the usual fashion”. If there was ever an area in R&D that could is ripe for improvement, this is it.

Cases of scientists being judged on the number of notebooks filled leading to “dry labbing”. This is where lab notebooks are padded with many planned experiments which are never carried out. Just looking at the number of notebooks filled these scientists appear to be very productive.

I’ve always been frustrated when trying to find info in others lab notebooks. Lack of table of experiments in the front resulting in having to flip through the notebook until you find the right result. Not knowing which of dozens of lab notebooks contains the information you need. Experimental results such as chromatograms or NMR printouts not being in the notebook or even worse, being in another 3 ring notebook that isn’t identified by anything other than a volume number. I have spent too much time trying to find information rather than analyzing and coming up with new experiments.

The problem is at its worst in discovery or med chem groups but I will note that even in most process development groups it is better but still not great.

The article doesn’t comment on stats for use of phrases such as “typical work-up procedure”, “standard procedure”, etc. without referencing some other document or lab notebook page. As a process development chemist, I always found this sort of documentation mind boggling. I had one case were I was repeating a drug discovery process on a small scale to become familiar with the process and at one point encounter a horrible emulsion. I went to the discovery chemist and asked if this is what he saw and if so, what did he do about it. He said yes, he saw that too and he just left it to sit overnight until it separated. This was NOT noted in his lab notebook! Needless to say, this required a lot of work in process development to get a process that would work on even a 22L scale.

The other complaint I have is even when a work-up procedure it listed, most of the time in my experience, the procedure did not list volumes of solvent or aqueous washes used. In another case, it said the organic layer was washed repeatedly with water. I found out that it was washed 15 times with huge amounts of water each time!!! None of that was documented. When I asked the chemist, they said all these washes with that large of volume of water was indeed required to get rid of some inorganic salts. Ends up, using equal volumes and doing 3 washes worked fine.

All of these are huge problems and I do indeed think that electronic notebooks are needed. I’d like to see them used much more widely than they are currently and think this could go a long way towards increasing R&D productivity.

I should point out that the author, Robin Y. Smith is Vice President of Product Strategy at Symyx Technologies and they make software for electronic notebooks.

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    Rimonabant Update in the US

    by @ 2:09 pm.  Filed under Pharma News

    Not much new here except that Sanofi-aventis has resubmitted their NDA for Acomplia (rimonabant) on Oct 26 and the FDA has accepted it.

    PharmaLive: Rimonabant Update in the United States :

    The goal is to have a decision by Apr 26, 2007 according to the user fee goals.

    Nothing else new to really to note.

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    GlaxoSmithKline To Acquire Domantis

    by @ 2:03 pm.  Filed under Pharma News

    More mergers; now GlaxoSmithKline is getting into the M&A trend and will acquire Domantis for $454 million in cash. It should be noted that Domantis has been around only since 2000.

    GSK To Acquire Domantis

    Everyone knows the big pharma GSK but you may not have heard of Domantis. They make human antibody therapeutics. They have approx. 12 antibody therapeutics in several categories but primarily in the fields of inflammation and oncology.

    It will be interesting though since Domantis has a discovery collaboration with Bristol-Myers Squibb since Dec 2005. I’m sure this will change now that GSK is purchasing Domantis.

    Here are the press releases:

    Domantis
    GlaxoSmithKline to acquire Domantis for £230 million - GlaxoSmithKline

    This appears to me to be another case of big pharma getting into the biologics and for GSK it looks like a good purchase.

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    Sources of Pharmaceutical Mergers Online

    by @ 1:43 pm.  Filed under Pharma

    Regular readers know that I try to keep on top of mergers and acquisitions in the pharmaceutical and biotech industries. It is hard to keep up and recently I found several free sources online that list mergers.

    Trevor Laird had an editorial in Org. Proc. Res. & Dev entitled Company Names Changes (pdf) which mentions many of the larger changes up to 2002.

    Signals Magazine had a list of both pharma and biotech mergers but it is somewhat old being from 2000.

    Pharmalive had an article which mentioned there were 230 mergers and acquisitions in just 2005 but they only list a few.

    Drug Discovery & Development magazine has a regular Reed life Science News that lists alliances, collaborations, mergers, and acquisitions. Here is a list of the search results. Here are the results for 12/8/06.

    C&EN had an article back in 2002 entitled DRUG DEAL-MAKING DYNAMICS CHANGE which has a table of mergers but again this is from 2002.

    A search of Biospace gives a list of search results for mergers. This link should always give the most recent 100 results for “merger” within Biospace news. They also have a category for all merger and acquisition news. This is the best way I know of to keep up on what is going on in this area.

    I hope anyone interested in M&A activity in the biotech and pharmaceutical industry finds these sources useful. If anyone else knows of other good sources, please feel free to leave a comment.

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    Number of Dinosaurs Yet to be Discovered

    by @ 1:12 pm.  Filed under Science

    In getting caught up on reading some trade magazines I recently came across an article that interested me. Regular readers know I have an interest in paleontology and dinosaurs. In Scientific Computing there was a brief mention of a study done by Steve Wang a statistician at Swarthmore College who has calculated that most dinosaurs that ever existed have NOT yet been discovered. He also calculated that 75% of those unknown will be found in the next 60-100 years. This means it will be an exciting time for paleontolgy for the next 100 years.

    This was published in the Proc Nat Acad Sci. and here is the abstract. The article is Estimating the diversity of dinosaurs (pdf).

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