How will quantum impact the biotech industry?

The
physics
of
atoms
and
the
technology
behind
treating
disease
might
sound
like
disparate
fields.
However,
in
the
past
few
decades,
advances
in
artificial
intelligence,
sensing,
simulation
and
more
have driven enormous
impacts within
the biotech industry.

Quantum
computing provides
an
opportunity to extend
these
advancements
with computational
speedups and/or
accuracy in
each
of
those
areas. Now
is
the
time for
enterprises,
commercial
organizations
and
research
institutions
to
begin
exploring
how
to
use
quantum
to
solve
problems
in
their
respective
domains.

As
a
Partner
in
IBM’s
Quantum
practice,
I’ve
had
the
pleasure
of working
alongside
Wade
Davis,
Vice
President
of
Computational
Science
&
Head
of
Digital
for
Research
at
Moderna,
to
drive
quantum
innovation
in
healthcare.
Below,
you’ll
find
some
of
the
perspectives
we
share
on
the
future
in
quantum compute in
biotech.

What
is quantum computing?

Quantum
computing
is
a
new
kind
of
computer
processing
technology
that
relies
on
the
science
that
governs
the
behavior
of
atoms
to
solve
problems
that
are too
complex
or
not
practical for
today’s
fastest
supercomputers.
We
don’t
expect
quantum
to
replace
classical computing. Rather,
quantum
computers
will
serve
as
a highly
specialized
and complementary
computing
resource
for
running
specific tasks.

A
classical
computer
is
how
you’re
reading
this
blog.
These
computers
represent
information
in
strings
of
zeros
and
ones
and
manipulate
these
strings
by
using
a
set
of
logical
operations.
The
result
is
a
computer
that
behaves
deterministically—these
operations
have
well-defined
effects,
and
a
sequence
of
operations
resulting
in
a
single outcome.
Quantum
computers,
however,
are
probabilistic—the
same
sequence
of
operations
can
have
different
outcomes,
allowing
these
computers
to
explore
and
calculate multiple
scenarios
simultaneously.
But
this
alone does
not
explain
the
full
power
of quantum computing. Quantum
mechanics
offers
us
access
to
a
tweaked
and
counterintuitive
version
of
probability
that
allows
us
to
run
computations
inaccessible
to
classical
computers. 

Therefore,
quantum
computers
enable
us
to
evaluate
new
dimensions
for
existing
problems
and
explore
entirely
new
frontiers
that
are
not
accessible
today.
And
they
perform
computations
in
a
way
that
more
closely
mirrors
nature
itself.

As
mentioned,
we
don’t
expect
quantum
computers
to
replace
classical
computers.
Each
one
has
its
strengths
and
weaknesses:
while
quantum
will
excel
at
running
certain
algorithms
or
simulating
nature,
classical
will
still
take
on
much
of
the
work.
We
anticipate
a
future
wherein
programs
weave
quantum
and
classical
computation
together,
relying
on
each
one
where
they’re
more
appropriate.
Quantum
will
extend
the
power
of
classical. 

Unlocking
new
potential

A
set
of
core
enterprise
applications
has crystallized
from
an
environment
of
rapidly
maturing
quantum
hardware
and
software.
What
the
following
problems
share
are
many
variables,
a
structure
that
seems
to
map
well
to
the
rules
of
quantum
mechanics,
and
difficulty
solving
them
with
today’s
HPC
resources.
They
broadly
fall
into
three
buckets:


  • Advanced
    mathematics
    and
    complex
    data
    structures
    . The
    multidimensional
    nature
    of
    quantum
    mechanics
    offers
    a
    new
    way
    to
    approach
    problems
    with
    many
    moving
    parts,
    enabling
    better
    analytic
    performance
    for
    computationally
    complex
    problems.
    Even
    with
    recent
    and
    transformative
    advancements
    in
    AI
    and
    generative
    AI,
    quantum
    compute
    promises
    the
    ability
    to
    identify
    and
    recognize
    patterns
    that
    are
    not
    detectable
    for
    classical-trained
    AI,
    especially
    where
    data
    is
    sparse
    and
    imbalanced.
    For
    biotech,
    this
    might
    be
    beneficial
    for
    combing
    through
    datasets
    to
    find
    trends
    that
    might
    identify
    and
    personalize
    interventions
    that
    target
    disease
    at
    the
    cellular
    level.

  • Search
    and
    optimization. 
    Enterprises
    have
    a
    large
    appetite
    for
    tackling
    complex
    combinatorial
    and
    black-box
    problems
    to
    generate
    more
    robust
    insights
    for
    strategic
    planning
    and
    investments. Though
    further
    on
    the
    horizon,
    quantum
    systems
    are
    being
    intensely
    studied
    for
    their
    ability
    to
    consider
    a
    broad
    set
    of
    computations
    concurrently, by
    generating
    statistical
    distributions, unlocking
    a
    host
    of
    promising
    opportunities including
    the
    ability
    to
    rapidly
    identify
    protein
    folding
    structures
    and
    optimize
    sequencing
    to
    advance
    mRNA-based
    therapeutics.

  • Simulating
    nature
    .
    Quantum
    computers
    naturally
    re-create
    the
    behavior
    of
    atoms
    and
    even
    subatomic
    particles—making
    them
    valuable
    for
    simulating
    how
    matter
    interacts
    with
    its
    environment.
    This
    opens
    up
    new
    possibilities
    to
    design
    new
    drugs
    to
    fight
    emerging
    diseases
    within
    the
    biotech
    industry—and
    more
    broadly,
    to
    discover
    new
    materials
    that
    can
    enable
    carbon
    capture
    and
    optimize
    energy
    storage
    to
    help
    industries
    fight
    climate
    change.

At
IBM,
we
recognize
that
our
role
is
not
only
to
provide
world-leading
hardware
and
software,
but
also
to
connect
quantum
experts
with
nonquantum
domain
experts
across
these
areas
to
bring
useful
quantum
computing
sooner.
To
that
end,
we convened five
working
groups
covering
healthcare/life
sciences,
materials
science,
high-energy
physics,
optimization
and
sustainability.
Each
of
these
working
groups
gathers in person
to
generate
ideas
and
foster
collaborations—and
then
these
collaborations
work
together
to
produce new research
and
domain-specific
implementations
of
quantum
algorithms.

As
algorithm
discovery
and
development
matures
and
we
expand
our
focus
to
real-world
applications,
commercial
entities,
too,
are
shifting
from
experimental
proof-of-concepts
toward
utility-scale
prototypes
that
will
be
integrated
into
their
workflows.
Over
the
next
few
years,
enterprises
across
the
world
will
be
investing
to
upskill
talent
and
prepare
their
organizations
for
the
arrival
of
quantum
computing.

Today,
an
organization’s
quantum
computing
readiness
score
is
most
influenced
by
its
operating
model:
if
an
organization
invests
in
a
team
and
a
process
to
govern
their
quantum
innovation,
they
are
better
positioned
than
peers
that
focus
just
on
the
technology
without
corresponding
investment
in
their
talent
and
innovation
process. 
IBM
Institute
for
Business
Value
|
Research
Insights:
Making
Quantum
Readiness
Real

Among
industries
that
are
making
the
pivot
to
useful
quantum
computing,
the
biotech
industry
is
moving
rapidly
to
explore
how
quantum
compute
can
help
reduce
the
cost
and
speed
up
the
time
required
to
discover,
create,
and
distribute
therapeutic
treatments
that
will
improve
the
health,
the
well
being
and
the
quality
of
life
for
individuals
suffering
from
chronic
disease.
According
to
BCG’s

Quantum
Computing
Is
Becoming
Business
Ready
report
:
“eight
of
the
top
ten
biopharma
companies
are
piloting
quantum
computing,
and
five
have
partnered
with
quantum
providers.”

Partnering
with
IBM

Recent
advancements
in
quantum
computing
have
opened
new
avenues
for
tackling
complex
combinatorial
problems
that
are
intractable
for
classical
computers.
Among
these
challenges,
the
prediction
of
mRNA
secondary
structure
is
a
critical
task
in
molecular
biology,
impacting
our
understanding
of
gene
expression,
regulation
and
the
design
of
RNA-based
therapeutics.

For
example,
Moderna
has
been
pioneering
the
development
of
quantum
for
biotechnology.
Emerging
from
the
pandemic,
Moderna
established
itself
as
a
game-changing
innovator
in
biotech
when
a
decade
of
extensive
R&D
allowed
them
to
use
their
technology
platform
to
deliver
a
COVID-19
vaccine
with
record
speed. 


Learn
more:
How
Moderna
uses
lipid
nanoparticles
(LNPs)
to
deliver
mRNA
and
help
fight
disease

Given
the
value
of
their
platform
approach,
perhaps
quantum
might
further
push
their
ability
to
perform
mRNA
research,
providing
a
host
of
novel
mRNA
vaccines
more
efficiently
than
ever
before.
This
is
where
IBM
can
help. 

As
an
initial
step,
Moderna
is
working
with
IBM
to
benchmark
the
application
of
quantum
computing
against a classical CPlex
protein
analysis
solver.
They’re
evaluating
the
performance
of
a
quantum
algorithm
called
CVaR
VQE
on
randomly
generated
mRNA
nucleotide
sequences
to
accurately
predict
stable
mRNA
structures
as
compared
to
current
state
of
the
art.
Their
findings
demonstrate
the
potential
of
quantum
computing
to
provide
insights
into
mRNA
dynamics
and
offer
a
promising
direction
for
advancing
computational
biology
through
quantum
algorithms.
As
a
next
step,
they
hope
to
push
quantum
to
sequence
lengths
beyond
what
CPLEX
can
handle.

This
is
just
one
of
many
collaborations
that
are
transforming
biotech processes with
the
help
of
quantum
computation.
Biotech
enterprises
are
using
IBM
Quantum
Systems
to
run
their
workloads
on
real
utility-scale
quantum
hardware,
while
leveraging
the
IBM
Quantum
Network
to
share
expertise
across
domains.
And
with
our
updated
IBM
Quantum
Accelerator
program,
enterprises
can
now prepare
their
organizations
with
hands-on guidance
to identify
use
cases,
design
workflows
and
develop
utility-scale
prototypes
that
use
quantum
computation
for
business
impact. 

The
time
has
never
been
better
to
begin
your
quantum
journey—get
started
today.

Bringing
useful
quantum
computing
to
the
world

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