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R&D Spending on the Rise - 0 views

  • BIG R&D SPENDERS Company R&D Spend in Rs Crore Ranbaxy 331 Dr Reddys Labs 283 Sun Pharmaceutical 146 Wockhardt 94 Lupin 87 Cadila Healthcare 71 Torrent Pharmaceuticals 51 Biocon 27 Panacea Biotec 24  
  • GLOBAL BIOTECH R&D PRODUCTIVITY ON THE RISE The productivity of big pharma has been remarkable over the past 25 years. In each of the last 10 years, the pharmaceutical industry has ranked at the top of Fortune.s .most profitable. industry list. But this top ranking has eluded the industry in recent years, during which the productivity of the biotech sector. for many years poor in the aggregate.has strengthened markedly. An emerging distinction between biotech and big pharma is the productivity of R&D. According to Arthur D Levinson, chairman and CEO, Genentech, R&D spending by large pharmaceutical companies has been steadily increasing over time, while the number of new drug approvals (NDAs) coming out of these companies has been decreasing. In 2004, the pharmaceutical industry spent about $50 billion on R&D, compared to $16 billion spent on R&D by publicly traded US biotech companies, and an estimated $20 billion spent by the global biotech industry. In spite of its large R&D expenditures, big pharmas. NDAs have been declining steadily, while biotechs have accounted for an increasing share of NDAs over the past five years. In 2003, the biotech industry hit a milestone when it surpassed big pharma in the number of new drug approvals from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in a given year. The trend continued to favor biotech in 2004. In 2005, an estimated 35 new pharmaceutical or biotechnology products with sales potential of at least $150 million each will enter the market. Of these, 20 are expected to be products from biotechnology companies, and will be marketed directly by these companies or in collaboration with pharmaceutical partners. In addition, there are more than 700 compounds from biotech firms at various stages of development, with more than 400 compounds in clinical trials. More than four out of five therapies currently in drug development are founded on biotech discoveries or employ biotech tools.                                                                                                       Source: Ernst & Young
hamelinclara

Global Pharmaceutical & Biotechnology Outlook 2013: Mature Biotech : ReportsnReports - 0 views

  • Profitable Biotech (Mature Biotech) and non-Profitable Biotech companies (Rising stars)
  • In the next five years the distinction between mature biotech companies and large global pharma is likely to disappear as investment in R&D and acquisition start delivering and Market Cap match the large global pharma. Dividend and consolidation could be the future drivers and continue to attract long term investors.
hamelinclara

Trius: In An About Face, Congress Is Helping Biotech Companies That Are Developing Anti... - 0 views

  • The implications for Trius (TSRX) and other leading biotechnology companies involved in antibiotics development are profound.
  • ost large pharmaceutical and biotechnology firms have avoided antibiotics for much of the past two decades in large part due to the intrusion of Congress into the regulatory process
  • The most visible sign of this shift in attitude came from Congress with the passage of the Generating Antibiotics Incentives Now Act or GAIN which became effective on October 1, 2012. This was intended to spur development of new antibiotics through streamlining a regulatory process which has been oppressive for much of the last decade. Responding to the prompting of Congress, I expect the FDA to approach regulatory approval of new antibiotics with the same sense of urgency as drugs for cancer. The end result will be quicker approval of new drugs and new indications for existing antibiotics.
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  • Antibiotics were major drivers of sales growth for the pharmaceutical industry in the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s which caught the attention of the industry's many critics. A consensus developed among politicians, consumer groups and payors that there was no need for new antibiotics as most bacteria were susceptible to existing products. They saw new antibiotics as offering no advantages over existing drugs even though they were priced many times higher. Faced with this hostile environment, drug companies began to de-emphasize antibiotic research and focus on trendy new areas like depression, cholesterol lowering, gastrointestinal reflux disease, etc.
  • Adding to the move away from antibiotic development was considerable scrutiny about side effects that the industry came under in the early part of the 2000s. A major catalyst for this was the Vioxx side effect issues that caused Merck (MRK) to withdraw this anti-inflammatory drug from the market in 2004
  • ooking beyond the GAIN Act, infectious disease experts, FDA and industry are working on proposals for a new restricted approval pathway that would speed the development of new antibacterial drugs and could address some of the economic disincentives that have driven most pharma companies out of the space. A drug's safety and effectiveness would be studied in substantially smaller, more rapid, and less expensive clinical trials, like those typically used to support Orphan Drug approvals. They would be narrowly indicated for use in small, well-defined populations of patients for whom the drugs' benefits have been shown to outweigh their risks. It would slash the number of patients required to gain approval from about 1,400 for the typical antibiotic indication to 100 or less, cut development time in half, and reduce regulatory uncertainty
hamelinclara

Merck Serono choisit les biosimilaires avec Dr Reddy's : BioPharmAnalyses - 1 views

  • Longtemps confiné à un nombre restreint d’acteurs spécialisés, le marché des biosimilaires est aujourd’hui en pleine expansion. Au moment où le principal marché pharmaceutique s’apprête à leur ouvrir ses portes avec la finalisation en cours aux Etats-Unis d’une réglementation sur les « follow-on biologics » – équivalent de la terminologie européenne biosimilaire – , la perte, dans les cinq prochaines années, des brevets de quelques uns des principaux blockbusters biotech, à l’image des  anticorps monoclonaux Mabthera® (rituximab), Herceptin® (trastuzumab) ou encore Remicade® (infliximab), a certes de quoi attiser les convoitises…
  • Sur ce marché qu’une étude récente de Frost&Sullivan estime à près de quatre milliards de $ en Europe en 2017, la compétition promet d’être rude.
  • Il s’agit notamment de Sandoz, Teva, Lonza, BiogenIdec, Samsung, Amgen, Hospira, Watson Pharmaceuticals, Baxter, Momenta Pharmaceuticals, Fujifilm, Kyowa Hakko Kirin, Daiichi Sankyo, Boehringer Ingelheim, Stada ou encore Gedeon Richter… et enfin, tout dernier en date, l’allemand Merck KGaA…
hamelinclara

Pharmaceuticals: Companies will focus on external partnerships to improve productivity ... - 0 views

  • If the buzzword for the pharmaceutical industry in 2012 was “patent cliff,” the key theme for 2013 is “partnership.”
  • maller R&D organizations and budgets, drug companies are putting more emphasis on working relationships with biotech firms or with academia
  • collaboration
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  • pharmaceutical leader for the consulting firm Ernst & Young.
  • Patrick Flochel
  • While trying to make their own research efforts more productive, companies are filling gaps in their drug pipelines through acquisitions.
  • n exception may be AstraZeneca, which lost its patent for the antipsychotic drug Seroquel and was hit hard by generics competition. “AstraZeneca is in a pretty dire situation,” Latwis says.
hamelinclara

Les Biotechnologies - Genopole - Réussir ensemble en Biotechnologie - 0 views

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    "« les biotechnologies sont l'application de la science et de la technologie à des organismes vivants, de même qu'à ses composantes, produits et modélisations, pour modifier des matériaux vivants ou non vivants aux fins de la production de connaissances, de biens et de services »."
hamelinclara

L'Université de la Charité et sanofi-aventis signent un accord de partenariat... - 0 views

  • Le groupe pharmaceutique sanofi-aventis et l'Université de la Charité à Berlin ont signé le 31 mai 2010 un accord de partenariat dans la recherche présenté comme la première collaboration public-privé de ce type en Allemagne
hamelinclara

SpineGuard : Une innovation à fort potentiel pour la chirurgie du rachis, inf... - 0 views

  • Destiné à percer la vertèbre pour réaliser l’emplacement de la vis, cet instrument possède à sa pointe un capteur et dans son manche une électronique embarquée
hamelinclara

R&D : en France, les grands labos misent sur l'externalisation, Actualités - 0 views

  • Les groupes pharmaceutiques étrangers croient à la possibilité de faire de la recherche en France. Mais plutôt sous une forme externalisée
  • Novartis Venture Fund, d'investir dans Gensight Biologics, une start-up issue de la recherche de l'Institut de la Vision spécialisée dans la thérapie génique de maladies rares de l'oeil. Quant à Pfizer, il a décidé d'investir dans Auriga Bioseeds, un fonds d'amorçage d'une quarantaine de millions d'euros. Ce fonds est destiné à investir au stade le plus précoce dans des start-up se créant autour de projets en infectiologie et microbiologie.
  • La R&D maison est découpée en petites entités «  gérées comme des biotechs », tandis qu'une équipe destinée à chercher des partenaires extérieurs a été mise en place au niveau du groupe, avec des relais dans les différents pays
hamelinclara

DALLAS, Feb. 8. 2013: Pharmaceutical Market & Biotechnology Industry 2013 Outlook in Ne... - 0 views

  • Key Topics Covered Value Based Pricing- Strength of Innovation Vs Fiscal Pressures Major therapy areas to shape up pharma business going forward Europe – Regulatory Pressures and Increasing Pro Generic Stance Will US fall to Pricing Pressures? Emerging Markets and their importance in Growth of Large Cap Pharma Global Pharma -Drugs Losing Patent Protection By 2017 Impact of patent expiry in w.r.t. 2012 total revenue thru 2017 Global Pharma Research Pipeline (PhII And PhIII)- 2013 Global Pharma Milestones in 2013 Roche: Breast Cancer Franchise And Actemra To Drive Near Term Growth, And Multiple Blockbusters In Pipeline To Take Care Of Long Term Growth GlaxoSmithKline: Next Generation Bronchodilators, Melanoma, Hiv And Emerging Market To Lead The Way While Regulatory Overhang In Respiratory And EU Pricing Pressure Persist Bristol-Myers Squibb: Pressures To Dominate In The Near Term, Pipeline Will Take Longer To Deliver AstraZeneca: 2013 Will Be A Transition Year And AZN May Have To Take Some Bold Initiatives Eli Lilly: Late Stage Pipeline Fickle And Risky Merck: News-flow from Mega-trial on MRK's cardiology Franchise would reshape Merck's Growth Prospects Novartis: Back on a Growth Trajectory Novo Nordisk: Hemophilia Franchise and Thrice Weekly Degludec – The Future Drivers Pfizer: M&A Only Can Drive Further Upside In The Near Term Sanofi: Solid Base Business, But Upside From Pipeline Will Take Longer To Come About Global Pharma Sector Industry Tables
  • provides valuations and an in depth analyses of biotech companies, their launched drug portfolio and promising drug candidates in the pipeline.
hamelinclara

Vue d'ensemble de Genzyme - 0 views

  • Vue d’ensemble de Genzyme Fondé en 1981 à Cambridge Massachusetts (Etats-Unis), Genzyme est aujourd’hui l’un des leaders de biotechnologie médicale dans le monde, qui rassemble près de 10 000 collaborateurs. Société du Groupe Sanofi depuis 2011, Genzyme bénéficie du réseau et des ressources de l’un des plus grands noms de l’industrie pharmaceutique au monde, autour d’un engagement commun : améliorer la qualité de vie des patients et de leurs proches. Depuis sa création, Genzyme a ouvert la voie au développement et à la mise à disposition de thérapies innovantes pour les patients atteints de maladies génétiques rares, notamment les maladies lysosomales. Aujourd’hui Genzyme développe également des produits et des services dans les maladies rares (hypercholestérolémie familiale) ou invalidantes (sclérose en plaques). Guidé par un sens aigu des responsabilités, Genzyme n’a de cesse de développer les échanges avec le monde médical et associatif, afin d’être au plus près des besoins des patients. Parce que chaque être humain est unique… Cette approche différente de la santé, fondée sur le respect des patients et combiné à un devoir d’innovation nous conduit à repousser, continuellement, les frontières du possible afin d’inventer le soin de demain.
  • A propos de Sanofi Sanofi est un leader mondial et diversifié de la santé qui recherche, développe et commercialise des solutions thérapeutiques centrées sur les besoins des patients. Sanofi possède des atouts fondamentaux dans le domaine de la santé avec sept plateformes de croissance : la prise en charge du diabète, les vaccins humains, les produits innovants, la santé grand public, les marchés émergents, la santé animale et le nouveau Genzyme. Sanofi est coté à Paris (EURONEXT: SAN) et à New York (NYSE: SNY).
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