×
AI startup’s drug breakthrough targets lung disease treatment
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Artificial intelligence has reached a milestone in drug development as Insilico Medicine announces the first successful mid-stage clinical trial of an AI-designed drug. The company’s experimental treatment for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis—a deadly lung disease with limited treatment options—demonstrated improved lung function in patients receiving the highest dose. This breakthrough represents a significant advancement in AI-driven pharmaceutical innovation, potentially reducing drug development timelines from years to months.

The big picture: Insilico Medicine’s drug rentosertib showed encouraging results in treating an incurable lung disease, marking what the company calls the first time an AI-created drug targeting an AI-identified biological pathway has succeeded in a mid-stage clinical study.

  • The highest dose of rentosertib improved lung function in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a condition characterized by lung scarring that progressively impairs breathing.
  • Biomarker analysis confirmed the drug worked as predicted by the AI system, specifically reducing a protein that artificial intelligence had hypothesized was linked to the disease.

Why this matters: The results validate AI’s potential to dramatically accelerate drug discovery, with Insilico claiming it reduced the typical timeline from 4.5 years to just 18 months for developing a clinical-ready drug candidate.

  • CEO Alex Zhavoronkov described the findings as “one of the best results people have ever seen” for this lung condition.
  • The breakthrough comes amid billions in investment from pharmaceutical companies and startups betting on AI’s ability to make drug development more efficient.

Behind the numbers: The study included only 71 patients, all from China, and ran for a relatively short 12 weeks, raising questions about the robustness of the findings.

  • Some patients taking the drug experienced worsening conditions, while several others developed liver injury that researchers acknowledged will require monitoring in future trials.
  • Zhavoronkov maintains the side effects are manageable and the drug is “reasonably safe” given the serious nature of the disease it treats.

Looking ahead: Despite promising initial results, rentosertib still faces a lengthy path to potential regulatory approval.

  • The company is formulating plans for larger trials needed to substantiate the drug’s efficacy, with approval at least two years away under the best-case scenario.
  • Insilico is currently running a parallel mid-stage study in the United States and plans to continue clinical trials in both China and the US.
  • The company, which filed to list in Hong Kong, views the data as a demonstration of its broader AI drug discovery platform, which includes more than 30 programs.
AI drug startup touts promising advance in treating lung disease

Recent News

Study reveals 4 ways AI is transforming sexual wellness

AI-powered tools offer relationship advice rated more empathetic than human responses.

In the Money: Google tests interactive finance charts in AI Mode for stock comparisons

Finance queries serve as Google's testing ground for broader data visualization across other subjects.

30 mathematicians met in secret to stump OpenAI. They (mostly) failed.

Mathematicians may soon shift from solving problems to collaborating with AI reasoning bots.