By: IPP Bureau
Last updated : July 12, 2025 8:13 pm
To streamline complex medical writing workflows with GenAI
Indegene, a digital-first, life sciences commercialization company, announced the launch of NEXT Medical Writing Automation, an advanced platform that combines deep medical writing expertise with generative AI (GenAI) to accelerate the creation of high-quality, compliant documents across clinical development, regulatory submissions, and beyond.
Medical writing teams are under constant pressure to deliver precise, regulatory-ready documents within tight timelines, often while navigating fragmented data and evolving compliance needs. NEXT Medical Writing Automation addresses these challenges head-on. It combines Indegene's decades of domain knowledge with the power of its AI engine, Cortex.
As a life sciences-specialist knowledge engineering and multi-agent orchestration platform, Cortex by Indegene enables life sciences leaders to adopt and scale this transformative technology with enterprise-grade governance.
Purpose-built by experienced medical writers, NEXT Medical Writing Automation operates within familiar environments like Microsoft Word, auto-generating compliant drafts that adapt to diverse sponsor formats and workflows. It integrates seamlessly with Regulatory Information Management (RIM) systems, maintaining traceability and consistency across documents.
With automated scheduling, intelligent task assignments, and robust data flow integration, NEXT Medical Writing Automation helps life sciences organizations scale operations efficiently while maintaining a strong compliance backbone. As document requirements grow and scrutiny intensifies, such solutions become essential to sustaining operational excellence.
"We see this platform as more than automation-it's about elevating the entire practice of medical writing," said Sameer Lal, SVP, Enterprise Medical Solutions, Indegene. "Writers can now focus on strategic tasks and critical thinking, while the platform manages the heavy lift of data and formatting."