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
Nov 18 WGS GeneDx Announces Heidi Chen as Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary
Nov 18 EVO Halozyme Provides Update on Non-Binding Proposal to Combine with Evotec
Nov 17 EVO Halozyme to Fund Proposed Evotec Takeover in Cash, CEO Says
Nov 16 EVO Key deals this week: Exxon, Unilever, Cardinal Health, Charter Communications and more
Nov 16 GLW CHIPS Act Funding Strengthens Corning’s (GLW) Already Solid Fundamentals
Nov 16 WGS Meet the Healthcare Stock That Produced Nvidia-Sized Gains in Less Than a Year
Nov 16 WGS Bitdeer Technologies, PBF Energy, and More Stocks See Action From Activist Investors
Nov 15 EVO Large Pharma Partner Halozyme Therapeutics Offers To Acquire Germany-Based Evotec For ~$2 Billion
Nov 15 WAT What Contributed To The Performance Of Waters Corporation (WAT) In Q3?
Nov 15 ADPT Wall Street Analysts Predict a 31.36% Upside in Adaptive Biotechnologies (ADPT): Here's What You Should Know
Nov 15 GLUE Wall Street Analysts Think Monte Rosa Therapeutics (GLUE) Could Surge 100.47%: Read This Before Placing a Bet
Nov 15 GLW Why This 1 Momentum Stock Could Be a Great Addition to Your Portfolio
Nov 15 EVO Halozyme Submits $2.11 Billion Acquisition Offer For Evotec
Nov 15 EVO Evotec shares surge 20% on Halozyme's 2 billion euro takeover bid
Nov 15 EVO Halozyme bids for Evotec; BeiGene gets a new name
Nov 14 EVO Germany’s Evotec Gets Takeover Interest From Halozyme
Nov 14 EVO Halozyme Confirms Proposal to Combine with Evotec for €11.00 Per Share in an All-Cash Transaction
Nov 14 EVO Evotec jumps as Halozyme confirms takeover interest (updated)
Nov 14 WAT Waters Corporation (WAT) Surged on Improved Demand
Nov 14 WAT Should You Invest in the First Trust Water ETF (FIW)?
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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