We also think about the strategic fit of the program within our company mission. We think about the performance of any particular program against pre-specified success criteria, which tend to be more technical. Did it demonstrate an effect in preclinical models or in first and human studies? Can it be graduated to the next level of progression?

Then, of course, we have to assess the business opportunity. None of these things can be addressed in a wholesome way by any one individual. So, it gets back to having a cross-functional and diverse set of opinions available to look at different options.

Based on our holistic view we try to prioritize what activities need to get resourced. That being said, there are a variety of different activities that we do have to prioritize and some of them are very different. For example, Repatha is a marketed product, it’s mature, and it’s still in the growth phase, there’s more that has to be done, it has to be resourced. But we also have products that are very early in the pipeline, coming to humans for the first time. We have to protect the opportunity for that exploration scientifically, as well. If we only focus on the winners of today, we’re not going to have any winners of tomorrow. We have to balance where we allocate our resources across the pipeline.

Going forward, do you envision there will be an intersectionality between the different areas of general medicine?

Absolutely. It becomes vital to have that understanding as early as possible, especially today. Why especially? Because the magnitude of the problems is getting worse. So, understanding how one therapy in one area could be equally applicable, if perhaps not more effective, in another becomes very important. I think there are some sea changes that are happening in general medicine that are helping us get to an ideal state.

It has to do with the application of what we’re calling precision medicine approaches. For example, ischemic heart disease or osteoporosis or obesity, are each one disease and huge. But the reality is they are many diseases. Each one of these broad categories has areas of intersection with the other. Perhaps most easily, think about the intersection between heart disease and obesity. There is a fraction of patients with obesity who develop heart disease, there are a fraction of patients with heart disease who have obesity. But it’s not all the same. Understanding which medicine can treat patients who are obese and have heart disease is a major riddle that we are trying to solve. It comes from the application of precision medicine.

“What energizes me is I know that cardiovascular diseases have immediate impact on you, me and people we care about.” Dr. Narimon Honarpour VP, global development, general medicine, Amgen

Precision medicine is the application of in-depth data and information that we have for patients or groups of patients that is new. The application of different biomarkers or omics to be able to analyze the full complement of a person’s genes, to be able to understand a complement of several thousand proteins that are circulating in our body at all times, how these apply to different levels of risk and how they portend potentially different responses to different therapies so patients may benefit from them differently. That is precision medicine — being able to break that ball apart.

When we apply these approaches, we start to see that the way that we qualify diseases today starts to unravel in a favorable way. Now we are getting at the drivers of the disease, which can be common across different diseases so that if we attack the driver we address multiple different conditions at once.

When you look at general medicine and metabolic diseases I think in the future it’s going to look a lot more like the management of oncological illnesses today. It’s going to be much more personal and much more based on precisely defined profiles. We just haven’t had access to that type of data until recently.

Drug development is fraught with disappointments. How do you keep your teams buoyed?

One of the things I do with my teams is align us first and foremost on our just cause. What do I mean? For me, it’s to be able to look at myself in the mirror and say I have done right by me and I have done the best I can for my community and the people around me. The just cause for me is to fight diseases that can have profound impact on public health.

If I use that as my goal or my litmus test and I prosecute my actions against that, whether there are highs or there are lows, I’m always doing right. It takes courage to fight that fight. There’s always risk involved. Sometimes you will win, most of the time you will not. But you will always be applying your best effort toward your just cause.

Once you’ve laid the foundation for your just cause and are keeping your teams motivated, it is fun to pepper in the excitement. This is where the insights and innovation of drug development and industry come into play. New therapies coming in that we don’t know how they’re going to pan out — that’s exciting. There are also therapies that are tried, tested and true that have new data coming out, that’s also very exciting.

How does being a cardiologist impact your role?

Coming from the cardiovascular tradition, the facts and figures for ischemic heart disease, for example, are always top of mind. I think it is oftentimes forgotten in the headlines, but heart disease is the top killer globally. That knowledge and having seen what cardiovascular disease does to patients intimately from my prior practice, also to my family, my neighbors, the weight of all of that weighs on me greatly.

More than anything, I will say perhaps my background brings urgency to everything that I like to think that I do to help move our pipeline along and to help improve public health.

What energizes me, also, coming from this tradition is I know that cardiovascular diseases have immediate impact on you, me and people we care about. Again, our family, our neighbors, our friends. This is a condition that does not discriminate between people. Unraveling the mysteries that underlie cardiovascular disease, and understanding why it can look different in different people — even though it’s a threat to all — is really fascinating to me. I really hope that one day we will all be able to help get the right medicines to the right patients by looking at this disease through different lenses. We all have a special lens to apply here to unravel this riddle.