Lifted from Fierce Publications en masse
Tuesday, March 22, 2016 | By Emily Wasserman
| Benjamin Wiegand, head of Janssen's DIA |
Johnson & Johnson's ($JNJ)
Janssen arm is dialing up research through its Disease Interception
Accelerator (DIA), a unit focused on predicting and preventing certain
diseases through new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches.
The company is kicking off two new projects for COPD and gestational
diabetes aimed at uncovering the biological underpinnings of the
diseases.
The
DIA will work with Boston University School of Medicine to uncover
disease pathways linked to COPD, and Singapore's Agency for Science,
Technology and Research (A*STAR) on pinpoint biomarkers for
gestational diabetes.
J&J now has more than two dozen research collaborations underway
after unveiling DIA in February 2015.
"Partnerships,
like those we have forged with Boston University School of Medicine and
A*STAR today, provide critical access to expertise at leading global
scientific centers, and advance our research to
realize disease interception as a viable strategy to achieving better
health for future generations," Ben Wiegand, head of DIA and Janssen
Research & Development, said in a statement.
J&J's
work with Boston University builds on the school's earlier efforts in
COPD.
Boston University, with the help of a grant from the U.S.
Department of Defense, has been trying to predict which military
members and veterans will develop lung cancer.
BU researchers got $8 million from J&J to test 1,000 civilian
smokers, screening for cell changes in people who eventually develop
COPD, the Associated Press reports.
J&J also gave BU researchers and study leader Dr.
Avrum Spira another $2.1 million to see how the immune system fails early on in people who develop lung cancer.
The team will see whether new drugs could boost the immune system to prevent people from getting the disease.
New Brunswick, NJ-based J&J will also sink funds into finding new biomarkers for women at risk for gestational diabetes.
Half of pregnant women would otherwise develop Type 2 diabetes within 10 years, and their babies have an eightfold risk of developing it, Wiegand told the AP.
"We've really been trying to introduce a new paradigm," Wiegand said, as quoted by the AP.
"We're moving from disease care to health care."
J&J's
DIA is keeping busy with other projects.
The company has partnered with government bodies, universities, patient
advocacy groups and biopharma companies in the past year to ramp up
research.
Other initiatives include one with JDRF that is focused on the early
development of Type 1 diabetes, and another with Denmark's Bavarian
Nordic to create a viral-based HPV vaccine.