FACETS (Dec 2020)

Open drug discovery of anti-virals critical for Canada’s pandemic strategy

  • Tania Bubela,
  • E. Richard Gold,
  • Vivek Goel,
  • Max Morgan,
  • Karen Mossman ,
  • Jason Nickerson,
  • David Patrick,
  • Aled Edwards

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1139/facets-2020-0079
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1019 – 1036

Abstract

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In the event of the current COVID-19 pandemic and in preparation for future pandemics, open science can support mission-oriented research and development, as well as commercialization. Open science shares skills and resources across sectors; avoids duplication and provides the basis for rapid and effective validation due to full transparency. It is a strategy that can adjust quickly to reflect changing incentives and priorities, because it does not rely on any one actor or sector. While eschewing patents, it can ensure high-quality drugs, low pricing, and access through existing regulatory mechanisms. Open science practices and partnerships decrease transaction costs, increase diversity of actors, reduce overall costs, open new, higher-risk/higher-impact approaches to research, and provide entrepreneurs freedom to operate and freedom to innovate. We argue that it is time to re-open science, not only in its now restricted arena of fundamental research, but throughout clinical translation. Our model and attendant recommendations map onto a strategy to accelerate discovery of novel broad-spectrum anti-viral drugs and clinical trials of those drugs, from first-in-human safety-focused trials to late stage trials for efficacy. The goal is to ensure low-cost and rapid access, globally, and to ensure that Canadians do not pay a premium for drugs developed from Canadian science.

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