Title: Outsourcing in the Pharmaceutical Industry
1Outsourcing in the Pharmaceutical Industry
- Bob Assenzo
- bassenzo_at_c-path.org
2Outsourcing in the Pharmaceutical Industry
- Current status of the pharma industry
- Future status?
- Outsourcing
- Mergers and acquisitions
- In-licensing
- Strategic alliances
- Program and project support
-
3Progress in Medical Science
- Medical science has made significant advances
life expectancy has risen from 55 years in the
early 20th century to 80
4Pharmaceutical Industry Today
- Medical Progress research-based pharmaceutical
companies have made great progress in treatment
of many illnesses, including infectious diseases,
childhood diseases, some types of cancer,
cardiovascular disease, diabetes and hepatitis - Over the past 20 years the cost of developing a
new drug has increased by a factor of 8
5Pharmaceutical Industry Today (cont.)
- Geographical shift the industry has shifted from
Europe to the United States - The top players are US companies
- 20 years ago the European and US markets were
roughly equal in size - Today, the US market is twice the size of the
European and far more profitable. - This has implications for global research and
innovation
6Pharmaceutical Industry Today (cont.)
- Geographical shift (cont.) European companies
are channeling more than half of their research
spending to the US (Novartis) - The US has a clear edge in the output (new
products) and input (RD spending) - The US is the center for the pharmaceutical
industry (exception Switzerland) - Humer
7Consolidation
- 15 years ago the 10 largest companies had 25 of
the global market - Today their market share is over 50
- Affects innovation
- To meet market growth target requires about a
5-fold increase in new launches and doubling of
average peak sales (Now 1.5 2.5, with ave.
peak USD 250 m Required 9 10, with ave. peak
USD 500 m, (or 5 6 launches, one with gtUSD 1 bn
and 4 5 with USD 750 m)) - Humer and McKinsey analysis
8Market Capitalization
- Over the past 5-6 years the market capitalization
has halved to USD 1.2-1.5 trillion - Shows that financial markets have greatly reduced
their assessment of the industrys prospects - Why?
9Market Capitalization (cont.)
- Stock market bubble burst
- Serious problems with some drugs
- Prices and costs are under scrutiny
- High failure rate in Phase III (50)
- Too long to bring new product to market
- Pressure has led many large pharma companies to
invest more RD in incremental improvements to
existing drugs, at the expense of real innovation - Innovation/Business Model
10Current Status (cont.)
- Only 3 of every 10 drugs marketed produce
revenue that exceeds cost of RD - Business model tied to small molecule
blockbuster inserts
11Percent of Revenue from Blockbuster Drugs
- Pfizer 77
- Merck 63
- Astra Zeneca 61
- Lilly 60
- GSK 56
- BMS 37
- Novartis 24
- Roche 23
- Aventis 18
- McKinsey Analysis
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15Mervis, J., Science 309726, 2005
Success rate falling
50
1994 overall 31 -- 1998 overall 8
16To develop one drug1991 231 Million and 7
years (DiMasi, Tufts)2003 802 Million and 12
years (DiMasi, Tufts)2010 1.7 Billion (Bain
Company) Unacceptable delays for life-saving
drugs Unacceptably high prices for new products
In spite of scientific/technological advances,
drug development efficiency declines
17RD Spending
- Large pharmaceutical companies spend 15 - 20 of
revenues on RD - In 2006, Pfizer spent USD 8.18 bn on RD (Pfizer
is the worlds biggest RD spender) - Pfizers annual revenue is ca. USD 51 bn, with
one-fourth of this from Lipitor - The 2006 increase in RD spending ranged from 10
(GSK) to 24 (Merck)
18Future TrendsDemographic Change
- Today there are about 450 million people
worldwide over 65 years of age (ca. 7) - This figure will double by 2020 and more than
triple by 2050 (17) - In 2050 in the USA there will be more than 80
million people over 65. Globally, there will be
ca. 400 million over 80 - This represents a growing burden on the health
care system
19Future TrendsDemographic Change (cont.)
- Chronic illnesses have already replaced
infectious diseases as the main cause of death
(absolute terms) e.g. cancer of the colon,
Alzheimers - Prevention is an important factor (disease
models, biomarkers) - Emerging countries, like China and India, face a
different situation. Rapid economic population
growth will drive up demand for healthcare
(infectious diseases)-industry presence needed - 50-60 m Indians can now afford private health
insurance.
20Future TrendsMore Individual Medical Treatment
- Drugs often do not have the expected effect
- PhRMA estimates that about USD 100 million are
wasted every year in the US because patients are
prescribed drugs that are ineffective or have
serious ADRs - Many reasons drugs not taken, people afraid of
ADRs, DDIs biological makeup (genetic
differences), inadequate info
21Future Targeted Therapy -Personalized Medicine
- Biomarkers for diagnosis, prognosis, effect
(surrogate variables) - Biomarkers for safety (pre-clinical and clinical)
and efficacy - Biomarkers for dosing (warfarin)
- Biomarkers for improving clinical trials
- Goal of targeted therapy to maximize benefit and
minimize ADRs not here yet
22Future TrendsTheranostics
- Develop biomarker devices and drugs
simultaneously - Earlier diagnosis of disease
- Cancer breast, leukemia
- Development of solutions to healthcare
- Still a way off
23Future TrendsBiotechnology
- Key technology of the 21st century
- Together with automation and information
technology it is opening up new perspectives for
all areas of life sciences, especially medicine - Highly potent, selective biopharmaceuticals have
proven successful especially in the treatment of
cancer - www.fda.gov/cber/
24Future TrendsBiotechnology (cont.)
- In the future, the treatment selected for cancer
will depend on the genetic pattern of the tumor - A knowledge of genetic differences among patients
can also aid in the development of new drugs
(e.g., inclusion and exclusion criteria)
25Strategies for Filling Pipelines
- Mergers and acquisitions
- In-licensing
- Strategic alliances and partnerships (pharma
biotech)
26Mergers and Acquisitions
- To gain RD economies of scale
- No proof that it does
- To acquire biotechnology
- Results mixed (merging cultures, retaining key
researchers, maintaining an innovative
environment) (J J) - To address the erratic nature of drug discovery
process (stop gap) - Cohen, Gangi, Lineen, Manard, Kellogg School of
Management NW University
27In-licensing
- In 2003 licensed products accounted for more
than USD 70 bn in revenue for the top 20 pharma
companies. By 2008 licensed products will account
for USD 100 bn, 1/3 of industrys total projected
revenue (Wood Mackenzie) - 24 of drugs in active RD are available for
licensing another 25 are already licensed out
or in co-development (Pharmaprojects) - Allows big pharma to spend less money than having
to acquire an entire organization - Competition driving up the costs and in-licensing
at earlier stages
28Strategic Alliances Partnerships
- Products co-developed by a pharma and biotech
company more likely to be commercialized (Shalo,
BioPartnerships) - The 20 largest pharmaceutical companies formed
about 1,500 alliances with biotech companies
between 1997 and 2002 (Shalo, BioPartnerships) - Roche and Genentech the most successful
strategic alliance (Lam, Pharmaceutical
Executive) - Challenge is cultural incompatibility
29Strategic Alliances PartnershipsRoche and
Genentech
- In 1990, Roche bought 10 of Genentech for USD
490 m, 60 stake control - Roche gained access to Genentechs data after
Phase II trials, option to decide whether they
wanted the product - If Roche took the product they were bound to pay
50 of all Genentechs RD costs to date, all
ongoing costs of getting registration outside the
US, and royalties on all sales outside US
30Strategic Alliances PartnershipsRoche and
Genentech (cont.)
- Genentech maintained its independence Roche
obtained a growing entrepreneurial company
without fear of stifling innovation - Roche gained access to a pipeline it could
market outside US - Deal benefited Genentech by providing needed
funding and freed up management to focus on core
business, rather than raising capital. - Roches investment was ca. USD 7.7 bn, it took
out USD 8 bn after IPO they still own 54 of
Genentech, worth about USD 28 bn. - Cohen, Gangi, Lineen, Manard, Kellogg School of
Mngmnt, NWU
31Outsourcing Program Project Support
- Market 2005 USD 33 bn
- Market 2007 (est.) USD 40 bn
- Growth at 10 per year
- Share of the market
- Clinical Research 29 (growing at 13 per year)
- Dosage form manufacture 26
- API manufacture 24
32Outsourcing Program Project Support (cont.)
- Basic Research Services (discovery and
development) Market USD 4bn growing at a rate
of 23 per year - Currently, the outsourcing industry averages only
about 24 of the estimated total potential for
outsourcing (great opportunities) - Pharmbiz, India
33Outsourcing Program Project Support INDIA
- The Indian patent act, amended in March 2005, has
opened a new avenue for India into the global
pharma market - Over 10,000 pharma companies, about one fourth
can provide GMP contract manufacturing facilities - At least 25 CROs with infrastructure and
experienced staff - Frost Sullivan
34Outsourcing Program Project Support INDIA
(cont.)
- Many excellent English speaking scientists
- Excellent software skills bioinformatics
- AstraZeneca in 2005 built a research facility in
Bangalore that focuses on tuberculosis. AZ plans
to invest another USD 30 m. (CEO The only
reason for opting for India is the quality of the
scientists.) - PharmTech
35Outsourcing Program Project Support INDIA
(cont.)
- Company A Has hired 300 statisticians
- Company B Has hired 150 statisticians
- The costs of direct and indirect personnel,
depreciation costs and material are about 40
lower in India - Reluctance by pharma companies conservatism
loss of control
36Outsourcing Program Project Support (cont.)
- Reasons for Outsourcing
- Large companies have recognized, for a long time,
the need to leverage in-house resources with
specialized, competent partners - Smaller companies cannot master the entire skill
range within the industry - Even large, well-established companies may lack
the flexibility to implement and perform critical
projects in a timely fashion
37Outsourcing Program Project Support (cont.)
- Reasons for Outsourcing(cont.)
- Outsourcing has become a strategy of choice for
moving multiple projects forward simultaneously - Companies are rationalizing their manufacturing
facilities, thus demand for contract
manufacturing will increase
38Outsourcing Program Project Support (cont.)
- Factors Driving Outsourcing
- Search for efficiencies in the drug development
cycle - Extending pharmaceutical company capacity
- Pharmaceutical industry consolidation
- Augmenting small sponsor resources and experience
- Access to specific therapeutic expertise
- Globalization
39Outsourcing Program Project Support (cont.)
- What Does Outsourcing Provide
- In an atmosphere of change and uncertainty
companies are making major strategic decisions
about their current and future operations,
organizational structure, products, and relations
with other players - Outsourcing provides a mechanism for leveraging
risk, and - Flexibility to adapt to rapidly changing
conditions
40Outsourcing Program Project Support (cont.)
- Reasons Companies Outsource(1998 Survey by The
Outsourcing Institute) - Reduce and control operating costs (54)
- Improve company focus (55)
- Gain Access to world-class capabilities (36)
- Free internal resources for other purposes (38)
- Resources are not available internally
- Accelerate reengineering benefits
- Function difficult to manage/out of control
- Make capital funds available
- Share risks (12)
- Cash Infusion
41Outsourcing and Competition from Other Countries
- Globalization means an increasingly tough race
for innovation - The US, EU and Switzerland are competing for jobs
and investment - Before long Asian countries like China, India and
Singapore will narrow the gap in the field of
research - New knowledge is sourced where it is available
and cost effective and where the general
framework is right
42Political Regulatory Framework
- Politics has a major impact on the future of the
pharmaceutical industry - Regulations on clinical trials, patent
protection, parallel imports, market approval
requirements and reimbursement prices determine
the pace of innovation and play an important role
in determining the relative attractiveness of
different locations
43RD Costs and Returns by Therapeutic Category
- DiMasi JA, Grabowski HG, Vernon J. RD Costs and
Returns by Therapeutic Category Drug Information
Journal, 38 211 223, 2004
44Critical Factors Regarding Decision to Develop a
Given Drug
- Selection of disease area businesses
- Economics of medical product development
- Current portfolio
- IP
- Medical needs
- In-house expertise/outsourcing availability
- Market competition and cost to enter market
- Regulatory requirements