Drug research and development are embracing translational research for its
potential to increase the number of drugs successfully brought to clinical
applications. Using the publicly available PubMed database, we sought to
describe the status of drug translational research, the distribution of
translational lags for all drugs as well as the collaborations between basic
science and clinical science in drug research. For each drug, an indicator
called Translational Lag was proposed to quantify the interval time from its
first PubMed article to its first clinical article. Meanwhile, the triangle of
biomedicine was also used to visualize the status and multidisciplinary
collaboration of drug translational research. The results showed that only
18.1% (24,410) of drugs/compounds had been successfully entering clinical
research. It averagely took 14.38 years (interquartile range, 4 to 21 years)
for a drug from the initial basic discovery to its first clinical research. In
addition, the results also revealed that, in drug research, there was rare
cooperation between basic science and clinical science, which were more
inclined to cooperate within disciplines.Comment: 7pages, 1 figure