Johnson & Johnson has recently praised AI capabilities in work efficiency and production.
The J&J group’s company chief information officer ‌said on Monday that its using artificial intelligence to slash production time by half to generate new leads for developing drugs.
Discovering new products outright and bringing them to market using AI is not yet possible, but J&J is using the new technology to screen the “potential universe” for promising chemical compounds or biologics, CIO Jim Swanson said at the Reuters Momentum AI event in New York.
“That’s still a ways away, but we can optimize,” Swanson said. “We’ve cut our lead optimization time in half.”
The New Jersey-based American multinational pharmaceutical and medical device company has been working toward a more focused approach to AI, honing in on core processes like AI-enabled products, drug development, and supply chain optimization.
“We’re trying to cure cancer,” Swanson said. “We need every tool that we can leverage to be able to do that.”
AI is also useful ‌in manufacturing, he said. The technology has been helping to determine when to add solvent at the appropriate time and temperature.
J&J is also using AI to streamline preparation of documents for regulators, Swanson said. The traditional process for a clinical trial report can take 700 to 900 hours, he said.
That time has gone from “700 hours to about 15 minutes,” Swanson said.
Swanson said rather than people being replaced by the technology, he sees using AI as an additional skill for the company’s employees. J&J currently has about 4,000 information technology employees.
“A software engineer isn’t getting replaced; now their role is expanding,” he said. “Our focus continues to be on skills. These are ‘and’ skills, not ‘or’ skills.”