Hospitals and universities repurposing drugs at 90% lower cost
Summary
A study from King's College London reveals that hospitals and universities are conducting late-stage clinical trials for repurposing generic drugs at less than 10% of pharmaceutical companies' costs, offering affordable treatments for conditions like blindness, cancer prevention, and Covid.
View Cached Full Text
Cached at: 06/18/26, 11:48 AM
Similar Articles
Uncovering repurposed medicines to fight liver fibrosis
DeepMind's Co-Scientist AI helped identify two repurposed medicines that block liver fibrosis in lab tests, including a cancer drug that blocked 91% of a damage response, outperforming human expert selections.
Medical students are using popular research tool to pump out misleading studies
Medical students are reportedly using a popular research tool to produce misleading studies, raising concerns about academic integrity and research quality.
Why “reprogramming” is the buzziest approach to reversing aging right now
A biotech company has dosed its first volunteer in a clinical trial for an experimental glaucoma treatment that uses cellular reprogramming to reverse age-related damage, part of a broader trend toward rejuvenation therapies.
FDA Shortens Clinical Trial Timelines for Drugs and Medical Devices with AI
The FDA launches a pilot program using Causal AI to shorten clinical trial timelines for drugs and medical devices, potentially reducing trial duration by 20-40% and speeding regulatory approval.
AI is accelerating drug development
AI is transforming U.S. pharmaceutical R&D by accelerating drug discovery, preclinical testing, clinical trials, and regulatory review, with early evidence suggesting it could cut development times by roughly half and reduce costs.