Drug Research and Development More Efficient Than Expected
Despite ever increasing regulation in drug approval and the rising costs of research, drug research and development (R&D) remains unexpectedly efficient. This shows a study conducted by the European Center of Pharmaceutical Medicine (ECPM) at the University of Basel. The results have been published in the journal Nature Reviews/Drug Discovery.
27 February 2015
Drug R&D costs have increased substantially in recent decades, while the number of new drugs has remained fairly constant, leading to concerns about the sustainability of drug R&D and question about the factors that could be responsible.
To investigate the efficiency in the development of new drugs, the researchers analyzed a data set consisting of new drugs approved by the FDA. They looked at efficiency indicators that could potentially positively influence the approval of new drugs.
Lower costs, faster approval
The study lead by Prof. Thomas D. Szucs analyzed 257 new drugs that were approved by the FDA from 2003 to 2013. To assess the so-called innovation efficiency, the researchers analyzed specific parameters and factors. The study shows: Although there remains some potential for efficiency enhancement, several parameters have developed positively in the past decade.
The researchers also discovered that new drugs get approved earlier and with less use of resources, when they entered the approval process assigned to special categories or programs. Affiliation to these categories alone reduces for example the probability of having to conduct expensive pivotal trials – a clinical trial designed to test the effectiveness of a drug against a placebo control group.
In conclusion the results show that market access of new drugs is not inefficient. Important is that “both industry and authorities work together in further developing drug approval in order to provide innovation to patients in a timely manner”, says Szucs.
Original source
Rossella Belleli, Roland Fisch, Thomas D. Szucs
Efficiency indicators for new drugs approved by the FDA from 2003 to 2013
Nature Reviews Drug Discovery (2015), published online 27 February 2015, doi: 10.1038/nrd4563
Further information
Prof. Dr. Thomas Szucs, European Center of Pharmaceutical Medicine, University of Basel, Tel. +41 61 265 76 50, email: thomas.szucs@unibas.ch