Drug Discovery Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Drug Discovery stocks.

Drug Discovery Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 31 SMMT Summit pares gains as ‘China-only’ trial beats Merck’s Keytruda
May 31 SMMT Summit reports data from Phase III NSCLC treatment trial
May 30 SMMT Summit Therapeutics Reports Inducement Grants Under Nasdaq Listing Rule 5635(c)(4)
May 30 SMMT Summit Shares Soar After Cancer Drug Tops Merck’s Keytruda
May 30 SUPN Supernus Pharmaceuticals to Participate in the Jefferies Global Healthcare Conference
May 30 SMMT Competitor to Merck's Keytruda Worries Some Investors
May 30 SMMT Summit lead asset beats Merck’s Keytruda in a first in lung cancer
May 30 SMMT Ivonescimab Monotherapy Decisively Beats Pembrolizumab Monotherapy Head-to-Head, Achieves Statistically Significant Superiority in PFS in First-Line Treatment of Patients with PD-L1 Positive NSCLC in China
May 30 RXRX How Is The Market Feeling About Recursion Pharmaceuticals?
May 30 WAT Insiders Buying Hilton Worldwide And 2 Other Stocks
May 30 RXRX Hedge Funds are Loading Up on This NVIDIA Corp (NVDA) Partner Stock
May 29 RXRX Power of Recursion OS on Display at Genome Scale in Nature Genetics Paper Detailing Potential Limitation of CRISPR Gene Editing Tool
May 29 WAT Insider Buying: Director Richard Fearon Acquires Shares of Waters Corp (WAT)
May 29 VTGN Vistagen to Present at the Jefferies Global Healthcare Conference
May 29 WGS Over $4M Bet On ProFrac Holding? Check Out These 3 Stocks Insiders Are Buying
May 28 SMMT Why Summit Therapeutics Stock Is Sinking Today
May 24 TWST IBD 50 Stock Reverses Badly As Weight-Loss Boost Fades Fast; Cathie Wood Stock Falls Hard
May 24 RXRX Recursion Appoints Robert Hershberg M.D., Ph.D, as New Chair of the Board
May 24 SUPN Do Options Traders Know Something About Supernus (SUPN) Stock We Don't?
May 24 SMMT Summit Therapeutics Shares Fall After Late-Stage Topline Data for Lung Cancer Treatment Announced
Drug Discovery

In the fields of medicine, biotechnology and pharmacology, drug discovery is the process by which new candidate medications are discovered. Historically, drugs were discovered through identifying the active ingredient from traditional remedies or by serendipitous discovery. Later chemical libraries of synthetic small molecules, natural products or extracts were screened in intact cells or whole organisms to identify substances that have a desirable therapeutic effect in a process known as
classical pharmacology. Since sequencing of the human genome which allowed rapid cloning and synthesis of large quantities of purified proteins, it has become common practice to use high throughput screening of large compounds libraries against isolated biological targets which are hypothesized to be disease modifying in a process known as reverse pharmacology. Hits from these screens are then tested in cells and then in animals for efficacy.
Modern drug discovery involves the identification of screening hits, medicinal chemistry and optimization of those hits to increase the affinity, selectivity (to reduce the potential of side effects), efficacy/potency, metabolic stability (to increase the half-life), and oral bioavailability. Once a compound that fulfills all of these requirements has been identified, it will begin the process of drug development prior to clinical trials. One or more of these steps may, but not necessarily, involve computer-aided drug design. Modern drug discovery is thus usually a capital-intensive process that involves large investments by pharmaceutical industry corporations as well as national governments (who provide grants and loan guarantees). Despite advances in technology and understanding of biological systems, drug discovery is still a lengthy, "expensive, difficult, and inefficient process" with low rate of new therapeutic discovery. In 2010, the research and development cost of each new molecular entity was about US$1.8 billion. Drug discovery is done by pharmaceutical companies, with research assistance from universities. The "final product" of drug discovery is a patent on the potential drug. The drug requires very expensive Phase I, II and III clinical trials, and most of them fail. Small companies have a critical role, often then selling the rights to larger companies that have the resources to run the clinical trials.
Discovering drugs that may be a commercial success, or a public health success, involves a complex interaction between investors, industry, academia, patent laws, regulatory exclusivity, marketing and the need to balance secrecy with communication. Meanwhile, for disorders whose rarity means that no large commercial success or public health effect can be expected, the orphan drug funding process ensures that people who experience those disorders can have some hope of pharmacotherapeutic advances.

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