The Nonclinical Podcast
You walked an investor through your toxicology data. Species rationale, dose-response, NOAEL, safety margins — technically airtight. They nodded. Then they turned to your CEO and asked: "So can the drug actually be given to people?" That gap isn't a science problem. It's a translation problem. In this episode, we break down the five places nonclinical scientists lose investors — and exactly how to reframe the same data so it answers the questions investors are actually asking. Key takeaways: * Investors aren't reading your nonclinical package for scientific defensibility — they're reading for what could kill the program * The same NOAEL means two different things depending on the reader: to FDA it's a dose justification floor, to an investor it's the answer to "how much room do you have before this gets dangerous?" * Species selection isn't regulatory boilerplate — it's proof that if the drug behaves badly, you'll see it in animals before it touches a patient * "Characterized and bounded" is the most powerful phrase in a pitch room — it tells investors you found the monster, measured it, and put it in a cage * The pre-IND meeting is your trump card with investors and most founders bury it on slide 14 — lead with it instead * Defensiveness in a pitch signals risk. Walk in knowing you and the investor have the same job: finding every way this program could fail Links: * The Complete Guide to Nonclinical Development: https://www.nonclinical.academy/ [https://www.nonclinical.academy/] * Work with Dessi: toxistrategy.com * Read the full newsletter issue on LinkedIn: the-nonclinical.com The Nonclinical is hosted by Dessi McEntee, MS, DABT — board-certified toxicologist and Fractional Head of Toxicology. Subscribe to the newsletter on LinkedIn, take the course at nonclinical.academy, or work with Dessi at toxistrategy.com.
10 episoder
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til at kommentere
Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af The Nonclinical Podcast-fællesskabet!