As of January 27, the global tally of SARS-CoV-2 infections has surpassed 100 million, with fatalities reaching 2 million. Remarkably, approximately 30 million confirmed cases remain untreated with ...
In a group of health-related headlines, one says "Hope for new drug approach. As government-supported research in the US is being decimated by funding cuts, it was refreshing to attend iDR25 (the ...
We're all familiar with the dilemma: It takes an average of 9.5 to 15 years to develop a new drug at a cost as high as $2.6 billion, with only a fraction of the drugs making it to market. With AI and ...
In a study published in the journal Nature Communications, researchers screened ReFRAME (short for repurposing, focused rescue, and accelerated Medchem), a drug-repurposing library, for drugs against ...
Finding a new medicine is never easy. But developing treatments for patients with rare diseases — conditions that afflict fewer than 200,000 people in the United States — is particularly challenging.
(CNN) — The practice of finding new uses for old medications — called repurposing or repositioning drugs — is not new. The most famous (or perhaps infamous) example is sildenafil — aka: Viagra.
London, July 1, 2024: The Drug Repurposing & Repositioning Inventions Boardroom provided a deep dive on this important topic with industry experts from NLO, 3D-PharmXchange, and the Repo4EU consortium ...