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How the connected lab can transform drug development

The devel­op­ment stage can be one of the most expen­sive and crit­i­cal in the life sci­ences val­ue chain, and is often bogged down in an over­sight process that is high­ly man­u­al and paper based. A clin­i­cal-stage study costs an aver­age of $1.1 bil­lion over 6.6 years, accord­ing to EY, and so any poten­tial for increas­ing speed and effi­cien­cy in bio­phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals devel­op­ment can have a dra­mat­ic impact on the bot­tom line.

Luck­i­ly, we’re now in the era of the smart con­nect­ed lab, with robot­ic process automa­tion (RPA) soft­ware deployed to trans­form the very nature of clin­i­cal devel­op­ment.

Automating process can lead to big wins

James Ewing, UK region­al direc­tor of Dig­i­tal Work­force, says automa­tion is chang­ing phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal man­u­fac­tur­ing in three key ways: stream­lin­ing oper­a­tions through automat­ing high-vol­ume, low-val­ue repet­i­tive tasks, such as com­par­ing datasets; help­ing researchers increase accu­ra­cy when deal­ing with large quan­ti­ties of data; and cut­ting down
the admin­is­tra­tive tasks asso­ci­at­ed with reg­u­la­tion.

“Giv­en that bio­phar­ma research is a heav­i­ly reg­u­lat­ed indus­try, there is a large amount of inter­nal doc­u­men­ta­tion which needs to be updat­ed and sub­mit­ted to exter­nal par­ties. This com­pli­ance paper­work process is time con­sum­ing, but can be eas­i­ly auto­mat­ed using RPA,” he says.

Mov­ing to RPA can stream­line the path­way from research to launch, says Daniel Pitch­ford, co-founder of AI Busi­ness. “The speed at which datasets can be analysed pro­vides more effi­cient ways for bio­phar­ma research to work towards cre­at­ing new drugs, test­ing them and then intro­duc­ing them into the mar­ket,” he says.

Clear­ly, there are huge gains to be had for sci­en­tists intro­duc­ing RPA, but it’s impor­tant these improve­ments are imple­ment­ed across bio­phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals organ­i­sa­tions.

Process control for greater transparency and speed

The Inter­na­tion­al Soci­ety of Phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal Engi­neer­ing (ISPE) is tak­ing steps to stan­dard­ise automa­tion in phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal man­u­fac­tur­ing across the indus­try. “They are devel­op­ing the roadmap for Phar­ma 4.0, the bio­phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal smart fac­to­ry which will fea­ture digi­ti­sa­tion and automa­tion as a cen­tral theme,” says Vin­cent Gras­so, glob­al prac­tice lead for health­care and life sci­ences at IPsoft.

There are major ben­e­fits to this con­nect­ed lab mod­el, as Dr Gras­so explains: “Digi­ti­sa­tion is an impor­tant com­po­nent, help­ing to cre­ate new lev­els of trans­paren­cy and speed. Instead of being cau­tious and wor­ry­ing about poten­tial human error, digi­ti­sa­tion will ulti­mate­ly make research more accu­rate and reli­able.”

Automa­tion and arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence mean the med­i­cine of the future will be almost unrecog­nis­able

Mr Ewing con­curs: “In a field where accu­ra­cy is absolute­ly vital, automa­tion can pro­vide an unprece­dent­ed lev­el of accu­ra­cy,” sup­port­ing human researchers in their work.

A con­nect­ed lab “can pro­vide huge cost-sav­ings to any bio­phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals research busi­ness”, adds Mr Pitch­ford.

Pharmaceutical industry must be open to data-sharing

Automa­tion in phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal man­u­fac­tur­ing needs to work seam­less­ly across the indus­try and bio­phar­ma com­pa­nies must be open to shar­ing data with oth­er busi­ness­es or gov­ern­ment agen­cies, he says.

“By shar­ing var­i­ous datasets, the speed at which new dis­cov­er­ies are made, which will ulti­mate­ly help in pro­vid­ing new and impor­tant research, is ten­fold,” says Mr Pitch­ford.

“In the US, fed­er­al agen­cies, indus­try groups and tech­nol­o­gy com­pa­nies are shar­ing their data with the aim of cre­at­ing bet­ter research in the health space, as well as bet­ter analy­sis of cur­rent and poten­tial health issues.”

The chal­lenge for RPA in the bio­phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals mar­ket is that it is so often fea­tures dri­ven. “Process­es should be defined and sta­ble before being auto­mat­ed,” says Mr Ewing. “Bots are often deployed to com­plete one task only. In real­i­ty, work­ers have the capa­bil­i­ty to move from task to task once one is com­plet­ed.”

Technological advances lead to challenges

ISPE is in the process of set­ting out best prac­tice for inter­op­er­abil­i­ty by devel­op­ing a mod­el for mov­ing from Indus­try 4.0 to the con­nect­ed lab future of Phar­ma 4.0.

Dr Gras­so explains: “The four design prin­ci­ples in Indus­try 4.0 include decen­tralised deci­sions, tech­ni­cal assis­tance, infor­ma­tion trans­paren­cy and inter­op­er­abil­i­ty. The last one, inter­op­er­abil­i­ty, is essen­tial to the har­mo­nious and secure pas­sage of data between machines, devices, sen­sors and peo­ple.”

The main poten­tial chal­lenge to suc­cess­ful inte­gra­tion of automa­tion is a clas­sic dig­i­tal trans­for­ma­tion issue, accord­ing to Dr Gras­so, who says many com­pa­nies still oper­ate lega­cy equip­ment that does not sup­port stan­dard com­mu­ni­ca­tion pro­to­cols. “Phar­ma com­pa­nies will need to invest in out­fit­ting exist­ing equip­ment or acquire new man­u­fac­tur­ing sys­tems that sup­port digi­ti­sa­tion of the sup­ply chain,” he says.

A sec­ond major chal­lenge is that IT depart­ments are fail­ing to sup­port the abil­i­ty of RPA and data-shar­ing with oth­er sys­tems. “This is one of the rea­sons the RPA mar­ket has grown, as bots have been brought in to com­plete the tasks failed inte­gra­tions have not been able to do,” says Mr Ewing.

The future for the connected lab

“RPA and arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence mean the med­i­cine of the future will be almost unrecog­nis­able,” says Mr Pitch­ford, sug­gest­ing that the tech­nol­o­gy could trig­ger trans­for­ma­tion­al change.

In the short to medi­um term at least, “bio­phar­ma firms should view RPA as an exten­sion of their work­force”, says Mr Ewing.

Enabling humans to focus on more strate­gic and knowl­edge-based activ­i­ties, such as clin­i­cal dis­cov­ery, RPA could lead to “speed­i­er and more accu­rate sci­en­tif­ic break­throughs”, accord­ing to Dr Gras­so. And a well-inte­grat­ed con­nect­ed lab will push the bound­aries of bio­phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals devel­op­ment even fur­ther.