50 years ago, computers helped speed up drug discovery

In 1974, a computer program helped researchers search for promising cancer drugs. Today, AI is helping speed up drug discovery.

50 years ago, computers helped speed up drug discovery
Cover of the February 23, 1974 issue of Science News

Cancer drugs by computerScience News, February 23, 1974

Chemists often need to sort a large number of compounds according to whether or not they possess a given property.… [Researchers] have been working on a technique of getting computers to teach themselves how to solve such problems. The most recent experiments indicate that the technique [based on pattern recognition] may be useful in finding cancer drugs.

Update

Modern computers can do more than sift through known compounds. With advanced artificial intelligence, computers are helping scientists design novel molecules and predict how those compounds will react with proteins in the body, possibly leading to new cancer treatments (SN: 10/18/18). The technology is promising but still in its early days. Ultimately, most drug candidates will still falter in people, some scientists caution. In 2021, the international biotech company Exscientia launched the first trial of an AI-developed cancer drug. But the company shelved the drug in 2023 after it proved to be ineffective. Other AI cancer drugs are in various stages of testing.

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