Could Open Source Principles Revolutionize Drug Development?

Sam Dean | OStatic | February 24, 2012

Here at OStatic, we've chronicled many examples of open source principles being applied to exotic types of projects, including some projects that combine software and hardware goals, and some that are purely hardware-focused. For example, we've covered the DIY projects you can take on via the Arduino open source hardware effort, and numerous examples of open source robotics projects. Now, a startup company is applying open source principles to, of all things, drug development. Transparency Life Sciences may have a shot at invoving patients in drug development in unprecedented ways, and could usher in innovative ways to speed up the clinical trials process.

If you follow the current state of drug development at all, you know that it is bogged down with a great deal of time-consuming regulatory friction. In addition, though, it is driven by scientists and doctors, not by patients. 

According to a statement from Transparency Life Sciences: "Transparency Life Sciences is the world’s first drug development company based on open innovation. Our goal is to develop medicines for significant unmet medical needs by acquiring promising drug compounds, designing studies via crowdsourced methods, and conducting those clinical studies with unmatched productivity."

The company was even inspired by Linux, and the community development that drives Linux along. According to an Xconomy post...