AI will boost drug development in 2025
Software-inspired medicines are getting closer to prime time
By Shailesh Chitnis, Global business correspondent, The Economist
Progress in computing has long been described by Moore’s law, a rule of thumb which says that the cost of processing power falls by half roughly every two years. The pharmaceutical industry follows an opposite rule. Its version, called Eroom’s law (“Moore” spelled backwards), posits that the cost of developing a new drug doubles roughly every nine years. In the 1960s $1bn (at 2008 prices) spent in research and development (R&D) yielded about ten new drugs. Today the same $1bn isn’t enough to produce even one.
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This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition of The World Ahead 2025 under the headline “Making pharma go faster”
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