ARTICLE

Volume 10,Issue 1

Fall 2025

Cite this article
15
Citations
38
Views
20 July 2023

The role of open innovation in biomarker discovery

Lilla Landeck1 Monika Lessl1 Andreas Busch1 Matthias Gottwald1 Khusru Asadullah1
© 2016 by the Author(s). Licensee Whioce Publishing, USA. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ )
Abstract

Precision medicine aims to treat diseases with special consideration for the individual biological variability.
Novel biomarkers (BM) are needed to predict therapeutic responses and to allow for the selection of suitable patients for
treatment with certain drugs. However, the identification and validation of appropriate BMs is challenging. Close collaboration between different partners seems to be a key success factor. While the importance of partnerships and larger,
well-established consortia in BM discovery such as the pharmaceutical industry and academic institutions is well understood and has been investigated in the past, the use of open-innovation models, also known as ‘crowd sourcing for biomarkers’, is still in its infancy. Crowd sourcing comprises of a — usually via internet — request for problem solution to an open group of users in a kind of an ‘open call’. The community (crowd) is asked to provide solutions. Since the application of the crowd sourcing method offers the possibility to collect as many as possible novel ideas from a broad community with different expertise, this approach is particularly promising for BM development. In this article we describe the first examples of open-innovation models, such as the ‘grants for targets’ (G4T) and biomarkers initiative ‘InnoCentive’ (innovation/incentive) platform. They may be a fruitful basis for collaborative BM development in the future.

Keywords
open innovation
biomarker
precision medicine
crowd sourcing
Conflict of interest
The authors declare they have no competing interests.
Share
Back to top