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Pharmaceutical companies are finding that reducing waste in drug manufacturing can also save them millions of dollars.
Creating a medicine from scratch takes years and may cost $1 billion. One alternative: recycling failed compounds for new applications.
Liquids act differently in tiny spaces, enabling lab-on-a-chip technology to transform research, drug discovery and disease diagnosis.
Pharmacists propose a third category of drugs—“behind the counter”—which they, not doctors, would prescribe.
The most popular drug in the world—aspirin—would never have won FDA approval. Fortunately, the active ingredient was isolated in 1828.
Once poised to defeat infectious disease, vaccines beat a long retreat. Now they’re back, and gaining new ground.
Injected RNA, which can turn off genes and halt production of harmful proteins, could profoundly affect the way we treat disease.
No-name drugs may be cheaper than brand names, but they have some drawbacks as well.
Coral reefs house millions of species, and each holds the possibility of millions of cures.
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