The Nonclinical Podcast
More data should mean less risk. In nonclinical development, that's not always true. In this episode, we explore the concept of data hormesis — the inflection point where accumulating more data stops reducing uncertainty and starts creating it. If your team is running another study because the last one didn't give you the answer you needed, this episode is for you. Key takeaways: * Data hormesis is the point where more information stops helping and starts obscuring the path forward — just like a drug that's beneficial at low doses and toxic at high ones * Early in development, data reduce uncertainty. Beyond a certain point, signals compete for attention rather than converging toward resolution * When decisions aren't defined early, data accumulation quietly becomes a substitute for judgment rather than a tool to support it * The patterns are recognizable: equivocal findings trigger rework instead of interpretation, borderline results lead to more studies without clarity on what would actually change * Programs that move efficiently to IND aren't the ones with the most data — they're the ones that decided early which risks are acceptable and which questions are worth answering now * Data don't create strategy. They make strategy visible. Links: * Data Is Not Strategy on Amazon: https://a.co/d/02xUsV6K [https://a.co/d/02xUsV6K] * Work with Dessi: www.toxistrategy.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.
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