BIO-IT World Announces the Winners of its 2010 Best Practices Awards Program
Needham, Mass. (PRWEB) April 23, 2010
Bio-IT World magazine announced the winners of its sixth Best Practices Awards program last night at the Best Practices Awards Dinner. Grand Prize winners from six life sciences awards categories were Bristol-Myers Squibb, The Scripps Research Institute, PROOF / iCAPTURE Centre of Excellence, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Centocor R&D, and FDA. The competition’s second Judges’ Prize was awarded to goBalto.com; the Editors’ Choice Award was awarded to Merck and Co. and the competition’s first Community Service Prize recognizing excellence in open source was awarded to the Royal Society of Chemistry.
Bio-IT World’s Best Practices Awards ceremony was held on Wednesday, April 21, 2010 at the World Trade Center in Boston, Mass., co-located with CHI’s eighth annual Bio-IT World Conference & Expo. Key industry leaders attended the ceremony, which featured a keynote speech by James (Jamie) Heywood, co-founder and chairman of PatientsLikeMe.com, a social networking community based in Cambridge, Mass., that gives patients unprecedented control and access to their health care information and the ability to compare it to other people.
Phillips Kuhl, co-founder and president of Cambridge Healthtech Institute (CHI), started the evened with welcoming comments and introduced Kevin Davies, Ph.D., editor-in-chief of Bio-IT World, the flagship publication of CHI, to initiate the presentation of awards.
“We are really delighted that this year’s Bio-IT World Best Practices Awards attracted a record number of entrants and that the quality was so remarkably high across all the categories. It made the judges’ task all the harder this year, but they seemed to enjoy it,” said Kevin Davies, editor in chief of Bio-IT World.
“This year’s winners include some truly outstanding and innovative examples of new technology and collaboration, and we’re delighted that we’ve been able to recognize some compelling examples of open-source initiatives and innovation in areas such as virtual conferencing that suggest new ways of sharing knowledge and data.”
A peer-review panel of 15 expert judges reexamined a record 74 detailed submissions from organizations running from big pharmaceutic and biotechnology companies, pedantic institutions, to niche service providers, detailing better practices in one of six categories. Allison Proffitt, managing editor of Bio-IT World; Grant Stephen, CEO, Tessella; Ron Ranauro, CEO, GenomeQuest; Phillips Kuhl; and Kevin Davies shown the Grand Prize trophies to the following organizations within these categories:
Research & Discovery: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Identifying Drug Effects via Pathway Alterations using an Integer Linear Programming Optimization Formulation on Phosphoproteomic Data
Clinical Trials: FDA
Common Table of Contents: allows FDA reviewers to review eCTD submissions for technological accuracy
(nominated by GlobalSubmit)
IT & Informatics: The Scripps Research Institute
Procurement Transformation: an online marketplace that allows researchers to acquire the supplies they postulate much faster and at a lower cost.
(nominated by SciQuest)
IT & Informatics/HPC: Bristol-Myers Squibb, Research & Development
High Content Screening – Road: a system for managing HCS images and analysis and enabling target identification, direct discovery, conduct evaluation and direct profiling.
Knowledge Management: Centocor R&D, Inc. (a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson)
tranSMART: a system permitting Johnson & Johnson researchers to query the company’s drug discovery and development data using a single tool.
(nominated by Recombinant Data Corp)
Personalized & Translational Medicine: PROOF / iCAPTURE Centre of Excellence
Semantic Data Integration, Knowledge Building and Sharing Applied to Biomarker Discovery and Patient Screening for Pre-diagnostic Heart, Lung or Kidney Failure in Transplantation Medicine
(nominated by IO Informatics)
Judges’ Prize: goBalto.com
The fast, most efficacious way to tie with life science service providers
Editors’ Choice Award: Merck and Co.
A Virtual Technology Symposium
Community Service Prize: Royal Society of Chemistry
ChemSpider: a gratis database containing over 23 million unequaled chemical entities,
(nominated by Collaborative Drug Discovery)
The following entries received honorable mentions:
Amylin; Virtual Data Center Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of California, San Diego (nominated by Convey Computer Corporation); InsPecT: Fast database search for post-transitional modified spectra University of California San Francisco; Epilepsy Phenome Genome Project HUNT Research Centre & Biobank (nominated by Thermo Fisher Scientific); Thermo Scientific Nautilus LIMS for Biobanks significantly increases throughput at Hunt Research Centre and Biobank Merck & Co. (nominated by BioFortis); Biomarker Data Integration Lahey Clinic (nominated by Orion Health); Medical Applications Portal Installation Genstruct / Pfizer GRD; Causal Network Model of 2-Butoxyethanol-Induced Hemangiosarcoma in Mice and Its Relevance to Humans AstraZeneca; AstraZeneca Patient Safety New Case Handling Operating Model Merck Research Laboratories (nominated by MaxisIT); ADAPT Dashboard Prototype Kendle; TrialEAS: web-based adjudication system
Criteria and Judging
Awards finalists and winners were selected for their innovative utilization of bio-IT, including life science equipment, informatics and information technology, on a project or organizational level to achieve significantly improved results (i.e. improvements in productivity or conceptual breakthroughs in scientific understanding or process methodology). The peer review judges applied several criteria to make their decisions, such as innovation, significance, and industry impact. Entries were accepted from R&D and scientific facilities and labs in pharmaceutical companies, biotech companies, academia, government, medical or related institutions and organizations, as well as public and private research labs. For information on Bio-IT World’s 2010 Best Practices Awards, please email marketing_chmg(at)chimediagroup(dot)com. The July/August issue of Bio-IT World will feature editorial on Best Practices, highlighting award winners, profiling entrants, event coverage and the enabling technologies used by the many companies.
The 2010 Best Practices Awards were organized by Bio-IT World editors, including Managing Editor Allison Byrum Proffitt, Editor-in- Chief Kevin Davies, and key marketing & operations staff members of Cambridge Healthtech Media Group, a division of CHI. Joining the editors in judging the entries was a distinguished panel of experts:
Al Doig, CHI Insight Pharma Reports Alan Louie, IDC Health Insights Bill Van Etten, The BioTeam Craig Lipset, Pfizer Derek Debe, Abbott Laboratories Jonathan Usuka, Celgene Joseph Cerro, The Schooner Group Martin Gollery, Tahoe Informatics Michael Rosenberg, Health Decisions Noemi Greyzdorf, IDC Phillips Kuhl, Cambridge Healthtech Institute Sandy Aronson, Harvard Medical School Saul Kravitz, CLC Bio Stephen Fogelson, Develotron Susan Ward, Consultant
Sponsors
Sponsors generously underwriting the 2010 Best Practices Awards are Tessella and GenomeQuest.
The winners will be profiled in the July/August issue of Bio-IT World. The 2011 Bio-IT World Best Practices competition will begin soliciting entries in October 2010.
About Bio-IT World
Bio-IT World (http://www.bio-itworld.com), the flagship publication of Cambridge Healthtech Institute (CHI), is the leading source of news on technology and strategic innovation in drug discovery, development, and clinical trials. Bio-IT World explores the tools and results of predictive biology as the industry adapts to the new world of personalized medicine. Bio-IT World has won 34 national and regional awards, more than any other magazine covering the life sciences industry. CHI offers a suite of published resources through a new division–Cambridge Healthtech Media Group–that includes Bio-IT World magazine, several topic-specific eNewsletters, white papers, webcasts, podcasts, conferences, and the Bio-IT World Best Practices Awards Program. The magazine is based in Needham, MA.
About Cambridge Healthtech Institute (CHI)
Founded in 1992, Cambridge Healthtech Institute (http://www.chicorporate.com) is the preeminent life science network for taken researchers and business experts from overstepped pharmaceutical, biotech, academic, and niche service provider organizations. CHI’s incorporating life science portfolio of products and services includes Cambridge Healthtech Institute Conferences, Pharmaceutical Strategy Series, Barnett International, Cambridge Healthtech Associates, Insight Pharma Reports, Marketing Services, Meeting Planners, and Cambridge Healthtech Media Group, which includes several eNewsletters, Bio-IT World magazine, as well as Lead Generation Programs.
Contact: Kevin Davies (Editor-in-Chief, Bio-IT World)