Integrating Lead Discovery



Best Practices Winner: Amgen
Project: Amgen Lead Discovery Informatics
Category: Drug Discovery and Development
Nominated by: Genedata

By Alissa Poh

August 3, 2009
| Like most other industries, pharma has its trends and recurring themes. Of late, a good many companies have been partnering with vendors to customize software for data consolidation. One such partnership, between Amgen and in-silico solutions specialist Genedata, yielded Amgen Lead Discovery Informatics (ALDI).

There’s always need for a more consistent view of research data—small wonder, given that many companies are really patchwork quilts of M&As. “Scientists tend to store their data in ways they like and can easily manipulate and view,” says Randal Chen, Amgen’s director of information systems. These seemingly small nuances in storage formats, he adds, actually add up to a large difference.

The Tripos-Wyeth-Accenture initiative—Next-Gen Discovery IT—is another recent example, albeit a more generic solution tying together Wyeth’s disparately-located databases. On the other hand, Chen notes that ALDI focuses on managing voluminous information from Amgen’s high-throughput screens.

“We’d acquired several other bio/pharma companies over the years, which gave us complementary core capabilities for finding new lead compounds,” says Bill Goode, a senior systems analyst within Amgen’s research informatics department, and project manager for ALDI. “But we also had to deal with the drawback of numerous legacy tools, different practices and workflows.” As such, Amgen’s research and information systems groups spearheaded ALDI as an effort to select a commercially available platform that would align the company’s multiple research sites, as well as support standardized methods for data analysis and progressing compounds.

Amgen and Genedata collaborated on the ALDI project, with the goal of developing a product capable of not only handling large volumes of information but also integrating with other Amgen systems. The choice of Genedata’s Screener came after extensive review of products on the market, as well as a joint Amgen-Genedata workshop to establish a framework for additional customization. “We had to see how Amgen’s requirements and our existing [Screener] product would fit together,” says Stephan Heyse, head of lead discovery informatics at Genedata.

Agile Development
The collaborators agreed to use an agile approach that broke development into “sprints.” Two-thirds of each three-week cycle were spent writing new software on Genedata’s part, followed by a week of testing by Amgen’s end users. Goode says this allowed for quick feedback and course correction as bugs and feature gaps were found. Heyse adds that it “took a lot of risk out of the whole project, as there was always control from both sides as to where this was heading.”

Heyse was enormously impressed that, right from the start, Amgen had “done all the work in aligning the overall project goals. They had a clear vision and a practical way of approaching it. We saw even then how much Screener could deliver and what was missing.”

Goode agrees that defining ALDI’s goals from the outset was vital in ensuring its successful implementation. The team sought an overall performance increase; better quality control in distinguishing compounds of interest from artifacts; a shorter period of data analysis for new assays without needing to increase support staff; and improved consolidation of workflows.

“The results were fairly impressive,” he says. “Our productivity increased by 50 percent on average—sometimes as high as 80 percent. Screener offered a bunch of intrinsic tools that allowed us to… rescue compounds we hadn’t previously identified as true actives. We removed the support staff bottleneck—it takes one week at most now to analyze new assay data. We also worked with our lead discovery scientists to define best practices, and [integrated these with Genedata’s] modules for curve-fitting, kinetics analysis, and hit selection that have had enormous impact on the quality of our data.”

Given these results, end user accolades, and the fact that ALDI was implemented in under a year, the collaborators felt that their system was ready to withstand scrutiny as a Best Practices entry—and they weren’t disappointed. “[The award] establishes that this type of software development, in this space, is valuable, and that the overall strategy we laid out for handling scientific data also worked,” says Goode. “It’s a great validation by our industry peers.”

Amgen is looking to reap ALDI’s benefits beyond lead discovery into therapeutics and eventually large-molecule studies. One unexpected benefit from this collaboration, says Goode, is that “our system’s foundation won’t need retooling or major redesign; we can build on other areas without rewriting the software from the ground up.”

Amgen viewed the ALDI project as a partnership. “Genedata brought their best expertise out from the very beginning,” says Goode. “It was much more a technical and scientific collaboration as opposed to them trying to sell us a piece of software.”

On Genedata’s part, Heyse was impressed by Amgen’s general lack of micromanagement. “They didn’t feel a need to specify every single detail in advance—we were simply told to go ahead and do our work, which was great,” he says. “You could say we ‘sprinted’ at this together.” 


This article also appeared in the July-August 2009 issue of Bio-IT World Magazine.
Subscriptions are free for qualifying individuals. Apply today.

Click here to login and leave a comment.  

0 Comments

Add Comment

Text Only 2000 character limit

Page 1 of 1



White Papers & Special Reports

sgi whp 2
Managing the Modern Genomics Data Flood
Sponsored by SGI

Managing and storing the perfect storm of multi-disciplined data pouring from next generation sequencers and other omics instruments is a central challenge in life sciences. Discover in this paper how the SGI ArcFiniti storage solution, optimized for unstructured genomics and life sciences data can: 

  • Reduce costs, proactively protect data integrity, and deliver the high performance I/O required for genomics data processing and analysis.  
  • Effectively manage capacities from 156TB to 1.4PB as a disk based, integrated hardware and software platform 


sgi - whp 1
Turning Genomics Data into Practical Insight
Sponsored by SGI

With worldwide sequencing capacity approaching 13 quadrillion DNA bases annually turning genomics data into knowledge is a true computational challenge. Read this paper and learn how the SGI UV coherent shared memory platform can:  

  • Speed results time while cost competitively tackling the most difficult computational problems across all omics disciplines. 
  • Push performance by scaling to extraordinary levels, up to 256 sockets (2,560 cores, 4,096 threads) per single system (one OS image). 

Provide support for up to 16TB of coherent shared memory in a single system image enabling extreme efficiency across a wide range of compute demands. 



accerlys-logo_2012_wh
New Complimentary Market Survey…
Collaborations and Communications Within Drug Discovery Research
Sponsored by Accelrys
This survey was conducted by the Cambridge Healthtech Media Group in January, 2012. It was sponsored by Accelrys related to their HEOS initiative to gather valid information around externalizing collaborative research while improving communications in the cloud. With 310 qualified industry respondents the survey findings reveal useful usage and trends patterns.  An insightful follow-on discussion and webinar related to this survey, and the HEOS by Scynexis SaaS portal is also available on the Bio-IT World website for complementary viewing.
 


Job Openings

tessella logo 
Scientific Software Engineer
Boston MA
$70,000 to $95,000
 
Apply at http://jobs.tessella.com   

oxford nanopore logo 


Early Access Collaborations ManagersClick here to find out more and apply   

Oxford Nanopore's GridION technology, VP, Sales and Marketing Click to  Apply  

For reprints and/or copyright permission, please contact  Tim McLucas, (781) 972-1342, tmclucas@healthtech.com .