February 11, 2008

SYNERGY Knowledge Assessment Launch

SYNERGY, a new 3 year European-funded Seventh Framework Research Project which commenced on the 1 February 2008, will research the knowledge sharing and collaboration support needs of stakeholders working collaboratively both internally within organisations, and within partnerships and new virtual network and business models. The project offers end user organisations an opportunity to participate in this leading edge research to address their unique requirements, to undergo a knowledge assessment of their collaboration needs, and the potential to pilot and test utility-based services developed during the project.

Swiss-based Douglas Connect will lead the SYNERGY workpackage on knowledge assessment, piloting and testing activities of application cases within industry and business contexts. To provide an opportunity for organisations to learn more about the initiative and the potential benefits of participation to them, Douglas Connect will hold a launch and networking event and Knowledge Café at the Radisson SAS Hotel in Basel, March 6 starting at 15.00. If interested in attending please contact Nicki Douglas of Douglas Connect, (Email: Nicki.Douglas –(at)- douglasconnect.com; Tel: +41 61 851 0461) to request a guest pass.

Following short presentations to inform, the event will feature peer-to-peer based Knowledge Café discussions on SYNERGY which will be facilitated by:

Prof. Keith Popplewell, Jaguar Cars Professor of Engineering Manufacture and Management, Coventry University, UK

Dr. Barry Hardy, Founder, InnovationWell & Knowledge Assessment Leader, Douglas Connect

Dr. Nenad Stojanovic, FZI Competence Center for Business Software, Forschungszentrum Informatik an der Universität Karlsruhe, Germany

Dr. Asha Nagesser, Managing Director, INSIDEAN GmbH

Richard Zbinden, CEO, Software for Corporate Leaders LLC

A more detailed agenda and project overview is provided in the continuation below.


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Knowledge-oriented Collaboration: SYNERGY research project summary

SYNERGY, a new 3 year European-funded Seventh Framework Research Project commencing on the 1 February 2008, will research the knowledge sharing and collaboration support needs of stakeholders working collaboratively both internally within organisations, and within partnerships and new virtual network and business models. The project offers end user organisations an opportunity to participate in this leading edge research to address their unique requirements, to undergo a knowledge assessment of their collaboration needs, and the potential to pilot and test utility-based services developed during the project.  A summary of the project extracted from the formal technical proposal is provided below. (in continuation text)


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April 28, 2006

InnovationWell Interest List and Signup

You can join our InnovationWell interest list (managed by Constant Contact) to be kept posted on news related to our community of practice activities using the following signup form:

Join Our Mailing List
Email:

Barry Hardy

InnovationWell Community of Practice

March 29, 2006

Combating Drug Counterfeiting & Trafficking

InnovationWell has created a new forum sponsored by Sun Microsystems which is dedicated to discussing approaches for combating drug counterfeiting & trafficking.

We are having a first conference call discussion Thursday 30 March, 11:00am - noon EST (i.e.,  08.00 California, 11am New York, 5pm London, 6pm Zurich since daylight-saving-time this week is in effect in the European time zones but not yet in the US time zones.)

To request a place in the conference call simply email me at barry.hardy [at] douglasconnect.com and I will send you dial-in instructions by return via email. 

The initial program will address current issues and challenges in the introduction of new technologies and processes for ensuring the legality and safety of drugs obtained by patients, including RFID-tagging, automatic product checking to track product throughout the supply chain and new IT-based approaches to security and privacy protection such as federated identity management.

Conference Call Discussion Agenda:
1. Introduction & Welcome, Ulrich Meier, Sun Microsystems Inc. [5 minutes]
2. Overview of RFID in the Pharma Industry, Jim McKiernan, McKiernan Associates [10 minutes]
3. Sun RFID Solution for Drug Authentication, Liz From and Vivek Khandelwal, Sun Microsystems Inc. [10 minutes]
4. ProIdent Open System for combating counterfeit drugs, Dietrich Heinicke, CADAC GmbH [10 minutes]
5. Identity Management in the Life Sciences: Compliance, Privacy, Information Life Cycle Management, Dr. Hellmuth Broda, Sun Microsystems Inc. [10 minutes]
6. Open Discussion [20 minutes]

Presentations may be viewed prior to the conference call by logging into the InnovationWell website at http://innovationwell.net/.  Subsequent to the call I will prepare and post a short summary article.

(Continued with discussion of the background and some the issues raised)

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September 23, 2005

Program for InnovationWell & eCheminfo InterAction Meetings

I summarise below the list of sessions with over 100 top speakers and discussion leaders for the program listing for the upcoming Autumn InterAction Meetings taking place in Philadelphia and Basel. Please add a traceback or link for other like-minded folk to find!

I also provide an electronic brochure for download here for the InnovationWell Autumn Program on Knowledge-based Innovation in Life Science Product Development:

Download InnovationWell-ProgramAutumn05.PDF

And the equivalent eCheminfo brochure on Drug Discovery:

Download eCheminfo-ProgramAutumn05.pdf

Note: The poster sessions will be run as electronic poster sessions using tabletop spaces, a wireless network and Internet facilities at the meetings, in addition to virtual access through the website, i.e., the posters will be electronic but the access can be face-to-face or virtual. You can participate in person and virtually in the poster sessions.  We can supply nourishment and refreshments locally; remote participants may have to order out! [We also expect, subject to on-site testing, to have live conference call capabilities for remote participating members to join local discussions.]  Anyone interested in presenting such an "electronic poster" should directly contact us via email at innovationwell at douglasconnect.com

Look forward to seeing you in Philadelphia or Basel!

Barry Hardy
Community of Practice Manager
Douglas Connect
http://douglasconnect.com/
+41 61 851 0170 (office)

InnovationWell & eCheminfo InterAction Meetings
Philadelphia, US, 11-12 October 2005 and Basel, Switzerland, 9-10 November
List of Sessions with Speakers & Schedule (InterAction Autumn Meetings)
http://innovationwell.net/ and http://echeminfo.com/

Registration to attend the meetings or to access virtually is available through the websites or through contacting Nicki Douglas [nicki.douglas at douglasconnect.com]

…PROGRAM LISTING CONTINUING IN FULL POSTING…..

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June 30, 2005

Knowledge Management in Pharmaceutical Manufacturing - optimising efficencies in knowledge transfer

The pharmaceutical industry has made impressive strides forward over the past decade in optimising how it manages clinical development. One important result has been a significant decrease in the time required to gain regulatory approval for a new drug. In the past it was common for clinical development to require in excess of ten years whereas today, especially for innovative treatments for unmet needs, this can be as short as 3 to 5 years.

The impact of this time compression on technical development and manufacturing is significant. In the old days, process technologists and chemists had many years during which to develop the manufacturing and analytical processes. A good example is the time to optimize chemical processes for active pharmaceutical ingredient (api). Best practice in drug development today means that the launch formulation of the drug should be the same as that used in the pivotal trials (late phase II and phase III). In order to have the formulation ready for these trials, the process chemists need to have frozen the final synthetic route shortly after the first trials in man have commenced. This means they have months in which to work compared to the years they had in the past.

Transfer of technology between development and manufacturing is now a key success factor to achieve robust processes and minimize cost of goods. This demands standardization of equipment, processes and materials between development and manufacturing, but also much greater interaction and dialogue from the earliest days of new product development. In the past this involved having experts from manufacturing participate in development project teams, often attending meetings during which their input was minimal and for projects for which the success likelihood was low. In manufacturing parlance this process is not fit for purpose and a better way of sharing and managing knowledge is needed.

The Life Sciences industry has recently started implementing concepts such as “Design for Manufacture” (DFM) which have been in use for over thirty years in industries such as automotive and electronics. These concepts recognize that most of the cost of a product is locked in early during the design phase and with ever-decreasing life cycles, the opportunity to optimize production processes post-launch are minimal.

In life sciences we face subtly different challenges. Life cycles are not so short, but the pressures on technical operations to reduce cost of goods sold (CoGS) are immense and this, combined with the new approach by regulators, such as the FDA, to compliance mean that improvements in integration between technical development and manufacturing operations will bring significant benefits. These benefits are to be found not only in costs but also in faster product throughput times, robust processes and greater control over issues affecting regulatory compliance.

Knowledge management is key to making this work. Research and development functions need to have a better understanding of preferred standards in equipment and materials used by technical operations; on the other hand technical operations need adequate warning of new product technologies which might require new investments or the selection of strategic outsourcing partners. In the past the high attrition rates suffered by early phase compounds made it difficult to set priorities and allocate time for technical operations’ involvement in development projects. This cannot be allowed to continue because development times are reducing with the implication that the launch molecule and formulation need to be finalized relatively early.

We will be having two workshop sessions this Autumn to address and discuss the above issues:

InterAction Meeting Session, Philadelphia, USA, 12 October 2005

chaired by Jack Vinson (Knowledge Jolt)

InterAction Meeting Session, Basel, Switzerland, 9 November 2005
Workshop delivered by Jim McKiernan (CEO, McKiernan Associates) and Mike Dey (VP, Pharmaceutical Development, Ipsen)

During these sessions case studies from pharmaceutical companies where knowledge management issues in transfer from R&D to manufacturing have been successfully addressed will be presented. They will then facilitate an interactive workshop with the participants in order to identify key concerns and to identify the steps to be taken to achieve excellent knowledge management in technical development and manufacturing.

You can SignUp for these sessions through the InnovationWell website.

Barry Hardy
InnovationWell Community of Practice Manager

Communities of Practice