Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Advances in Electronic Notebook Technology


By Harley Everett Wilcox, MBA
Senior Scientific Advisor
ABC Laboratories
www.abclabs.com

I started my career in the pharmaceutical industry in the early 1980’s and recall how we documented experiments in laboratory notebooks. As part of the synthesis research group, most experiments were synthesis of new molecules or purification of existing compounds. Almost every data entry or summary was manual and certain data were creatively documented. For example thin layer chromatography would be described by one of three techniques, a table listing retentions based on distance, a hand drawing showing relative spot size and location on the plates, or a photocopy once color copiers were available. NMR spectra existed most as a hard copy. Early notebooks were a single copy where a user copy was provided back to the user copy once the notebook was completed. Advances in notebook technology included two sheets for experiments and several sheets of carbon paper for an immediate copy.  For higher compliance such analytical efforts, an exhibit books containing plots and chromatographic printouts accompanied the actual notebook.   Peer review signatures and some QA review were incorporated. Eventually electronic scanning allowed for the first electronic storage.

Today, technology and compliance have significantly evolved.   I spent a few moments with our LIMs administrator, Kevin Cornel, for a Q&A on electronic laboratory notebooks (ELN), and although ELN’s have been available for some time, I was surprised to the extent the systems can help eliminate human errors and support automation.

With the introduction of laboratory information systems, instrument software, and electronic notebooks it would appear that the future may hold data generation with limited human input.  Users have electronic workbooks where menu’s for reagents, methods etc. are chosen and the entire experiment can use electronic inputs from balances, pH meters and HPLC’s interfaces etc.  Bar codes are scanned for samples, reference standards, and reagents to almost eliminate opportunities for errors and flag non-compliance such as expired reagents. Bar coding glass pipets, glassware are possibilities may serve to further refine experiment as well as provide more explicit data records. Electronic signature and permanent electronic profiles of all activities for a study allow for efficient auditing.

Clearly ELN’s will improve efficiency and quality but the information system requires significant up front resources. Existing software platforms must be compatible with ELN systems or interfaces will need to be created. Information services will create methods, workbook formats and all other desired fields and complete validations.  Analyst will require training for the chosen software systems for system set-up and management. Opportunities for errors then reside almost exclusively with the initial sample inventory and sample management where a sample/compound arrives and sample data is entered into the information system via barcode or like. A second reviewer of the upfront data entries may be worthwhile.

Will the introduction of robots interfaced with electronic data systems eliminate the need for a warm bodied chemist for certain types of analysis?