Title: A1257278556laUrE
1Biotech 2008 A 20/20 Vision to 2020
G. Steven Burrill Chief Executive Officer,
Burrill Company The Burrill Indiana Life
Sciences Meeting October 21, 2008
2What really happened since we were here last year?
- World financial crisis unprecedented (and not
over yet) - Wall Street totally restructured
- Economic dislocation in the world (well beyond
the US) will be pervasive and long term - Healthcare systems around the world reforming
too expensive to treat everyone with all the new
technology - Regulatory agencies increasingly risk-averse
- Reimbursement/payment undergoing change
32007 vs. 2008
4My 2007 book was about a global transformation
5a global transformation
6but now.A 20/20 Vision to 2020 (just a dozen
years away)
- What will the healthcare delivery system look
like in 2020? - In the U.S.?
- In the world?
- What will the marketplace include?
- Products
- Technology
- Where is the biotech revolution taking us?
7A 20/20 Vision to 2020
- So..Where will we go for healthcare in 2020?
- Sickness?
- Wellness?
8A 20/20 Vision to 2020
9Healthcare will be on the sickness side
- Centrally Delivered
-
- other consumer distribution centers
- Genetic Screening
- Pharmacy Distribution
- Doc-in-the-Box, staffed with nurse
practitioners - Specialized Delivery
- Comprehensive cancer / cardiovascular centers
- Heart Transplants R Us (surgery centers)
- Complex diseases
- Home Diagnostics/Monitoring systems
- Drop blood onto your Blackberry or iPod,
telecommunicated to central labs, real-time Dx/Px - Home monitoring
10Telemedicine and remote monitoring for chronic
disease care Self Care model
We will see an immediate impact improving the
quality of life of congestive heart failure
patients by reducing hospital readmissions This
way a patient is never far away from health
care. Terianne Cerep, Mgr Home Health
Mercy Hospital, Scranton PA
- Monitoring key health indicators for congestive
heart failure patients - Data transmitted to secure website monitored by
nursing staff, patients relatives
11Mobile and Home Health Monitoring
- Chronic disease diabetes, congestive heart
failure, etc. accounts for 75 of medical costs
in the US - Disease management can substantially improve
patient outcomes and lower cost - Medical devices and telecommunications
technologies are converging to develop monitoring
and control systems for patients with chronic
disease - Aging, remote monitoring
-
12Moores law Cost Per Base
13And where is technology taking us?
- Moores Law
- ID of genetic markers/links for most disease
(algorithms of biomarkers) - Note from a value standpoint- Genes R Us
model failed quickly individual biomarker
valve also likely to decline rapidly - Genetic screening becomes normal
- Understanding of biochemical mechanisms of most
diseases - Therefore personalization (customization) of
healthcare
14Longer Term Risk Assessment (prediction) Driving
to Prevention
- Genome wide association studies not just BRAC 12
- Navigenics
- DeCode
- 23andMe
- Shorter term, high accuracy risk
assessment/clinical support tools - Proventys
- Labcorp
- Quest
- Roche
- Genomic Health
- XDx
- CardioDx
15Genetic Association Information Network
The GAIN project was launched in 2006 by the
Foundation for the NIH and its partners, to
pursue a series of Genome-Wide Association
Studies (GWAS) designed to identify specific
points of DNA variation associated with the
occurrence of a particular common disease.
- Partners
- NIH
- Pfizer
- Affymetrix
- Perlegen Sciences
- Abbott
- The Broad Institute
- Objectives
- Develop genetic markers associated with disease
- Roughly 18,000 samples (patients)
- 300-500K SNPs per sample
- Open database at NCBI (dbGaP)
- Disease Areas
- Schizophrenia
- Bipoloar Disorder
- Major Depression
- Ischemic Stroke
- ADHD
- Psoriasis
- Diabetic Nephropathy
- Parkinsons Disease
- Age-Related Eye Disease
16The Biomarkers Consortium
- A public-private partnership to accelerate the
development and validation of biomarkers
important. - Consortium members include
- CMS, FDA, NIH
- Numerous commercial partners, including Pfizer,
Merck, AstraZeneca, Eli Lilly, Novartis, et al. - Numerous non-profit partners, including American
Cancer Society, ASCO, PhRMA, BIO, Academy of
Molecular Imaging, et al. - First selected project validation of FDG-PET for
lung and lymphoma cancers. - Results expected to demonstrate accelerated drug
approval cycles based on use of FDG-PET as a
surrogate endpoint in trials - "One of our most pressing goals under the
FDA's Critical Path Initiative is to improve
developmental science and technology to deliver
better diagnostics and more personalized
treatments to patients more quickly and
ultimately improve Outcomes. We believe the
identification and use of biomarkers in drug
development can have a catalytic impact on this
mission." - - Andrew C. von Eschenbach, M.D., FDA
Commissioner
17The Biomarkers Consortium Government Partners
18The Biomarkers Consortium Industry Partners
19The Biomarkers Consortium Non-Profit Partners
20Healthcare will be digitized
- Smart cards with electronic health records
sequenced DNA - Consumer driven personal health planning
- PHR
- Microsoft -HealthVault
- Google Health
- WebMD
- Revolution Health
- Europe / Asia may be faster, more integrated than
US
21Tracking Feedback
- Nike/Apple iPod Nano and online
workouts/equipment/fitness linked - Tools to monitor medication regiments to drive
compliance - Tools to measure
- Activity
- Sleep
- Food consumption
22Incentive Programs
- Stickk.com paying people to lose weight
- FitNet
- Gogetter
- Virgin
- Lifespring
- Insurer rewards
- Employer driven incentives
23Rapid Secure Communication with Doctors
- Relay health (McKesson)
- Minute clinic
- FitNet
24Patient-centric healthcare closer than we think?
- Founded in 2000
- Walk-in health care clinics, no appointment
needed - Located in 20 states, 200 centers
- Staffed by nurse-practitioners
- Location in popular retail stores Target, CVS
- 350,000 visits, 99 Patient satisfaction
Were delighted with the continued expansion of
MinuteClinic and with the enthusiastic response
of health care consumers. Were bringing
innovation and change to the marketplace and
consumers Michael Howe, CEO
25Ecosystems Based on Convergence
26Nano/Bio/Regenerative Medicine
- Nano devices in blood vessels roaming under own
power to diagnose and fix problems - Nanoparticals
- Removing bacteria from food
- Adding nutrients
- Aids in packaging/retaining freshness
- Artificial Organs/Regenerative Medicine
- Heart, lungs, pancreas, liver, kidney, blood,
eyes, ears, legs, hands, etc. - Advanced Prosthetics
- Arms, legs, hands- all with biological/
technological / psychological interaction sensors
27Healthcare Delivery in 2020 Closer to Patient
Primary CareComplex diagnostics
treatmentsMinor surgical proceduresBasic
diagnostics prescribing by nurse
practitionersLife checks
28Do Patients Want to See Someone Other Than a
Physician
29So, What are the Consequences for us of this
Consumer Digital Healthcare World?
- Low margin ethical drugs will predominate
- China/India/other low cost manufacturing sites
will have an edge - Theranostics Rx tied to Dx
- Worldwide pricing/parallel pricing direct
importation from lowest priced country - Pro-generics environment
- Patents devalued increasing competition in
marketplace - Big pharma will become product distributors/diseas
e managers more value across the entire disease
care spectrum, but more specialized
302020 Globalization / Changing the environment too
- Markets - demand increases in Asia developing
world - RD migrates to Asia
- Regulations International agencies collaborate
- Information healthcare payors share data on
performance (clinical financial) - Diseases know no boundaries
- Every company is global from day one!
31Start-ups Globalness Begins Day 1
- Science/technology
- Intellectual property/patents/FTO
- People
- Communications
- Competition
- Capital
- Marketsdiseases know no borders
- Even the smallest company is a global player
from Day One
32Industry Dilemmas
- Rising Healthcare Costs
- Loss of Patent Protection for Blockbuster Drugs
- Need for Innovation build vs. buy
- Reimbursement/Payment system changes Medicare
Part D - Compulsory Licensing in some countries
33Healthcare Costs Have Been Rising -For a Long Time
Drug Spending (B)
34Prescription Drug Costs as Percentage of
Healthcare
35US Healthcare Costs
Administration 35
Personnel costs 35
Procedures 18
Drugs 12
In vitro diagnostics 0.01
Diagnostic tests influence 85 of clinical actions
Source George Poste
36The Costs of Non-Compliance with Rx Regimens
- 177 billion projected cost
- 20 million workdays/year lost (IHPM)
- 40 of nursing home admissions
- projected 45-75 non-compliance (WHO)
- 50-60 depressed patients (IHPM)
- 50 chronic care Rx (WHO)
Source George Poste
37Healthcare Costs are Unevenly Distributed
- 0.5 patients consume 25 of healthcare budget
- 1 consume 35
- 5 consume 60
- 10 consume 70
- 50 consume 3
- 75 of cost is for patients with chronic diseases
- Source G. Halvorson/George Poste
38Market Distortions and Perverse Incentives in
Modern Healthcare Delivery
- Focus on late-stage detection and intervention
- High cost
- Low reversibility
- Multiple reimbursements for fragmented (siloed)
care versus integrated management of patient
needs - Medical professionals paid for illness versus
wellness - Inadequate social and economic incentives for
wellness - Inadequate medical training/understanding of
genetics/genomics/proteomics
Source George Poste / Burrill Company
39The Strategic Future of Healthcare
- Economic Unsustainability
Reform and Rational Care
or
Confronting the Imbalance Between Infinite Demand
and Finite Resources
Source George Poste
40Re-Inventing the Biopharmaceutical Industry
- Changing the industry versus changing with the
industry - Escaping the myopia of current markets and
investor horizons - Organizational re-structuring and process
re-engineering are insufficient for survival - Creation of unimagined products, services and
businesses - Integration of Dx, Rx and Ix
Where is the white space? How do we create new
companies in a new and different competitive
environment?
Source George Poste/Burrill Company
41The Three Forces Shaping the Evolution of
Healthcare
Demonstrating Value
Source George Poste
42Aligning Incentives
- Changing the value proposition in healthcare
- From cost to value
- From fragmented interventions to integrated care
- From late intervention in chronic disease to
prediction, prevention and earlier detection and
intervention - From empirical Rx to rational Rx targeted to the
underlying causal molecular pathologies - Escalating importance of Dx/PDx in the healthcare
value chain - Reversing the profitability of Rx/Dx
Source George Poste/Burrill Company
43The Evolution of Molecular Medicine and
Information-Based MedicineThe Foundation for
Rational Care and Personalized Medicine
Drug
New competencies in molecular medicine and
biomedical informatics
Real-time information for optimum decision-making
Molecular diagnostics
Drug
Disease management protocols, patient information
Package insert
Genetic profiling
Rx 2008
Medicine 2020
Source George Poste
44Disease Subtyping Next-Generation Molecular
Diagnostics (MDx) and A New Molecular Taxonomy
of Disease
- Dx Platforms
- Massive parallelism
- Miniaturization
- Automation
- Rapid
- POC
RIGHT Rx forRIGHT DISEASE SUBTYPE
B1 skin, B2, melanocytes, B3, melanoma, B4 and 5
metastatic melanoma From C. Haqq et al. (2005)
102, 6092
Source George Poste
45Physician Adoption of the New Diagnostics
- Demonstrated clinical value and better patient
outcomes - Solid scientific basis
- Ease of use, simple to understand
- Just another test
- Fits into the clinical workflow
- Enables early diagnosis and prediction
- Well-received by patients
- Low capital outlay
- Reimbursable
46Diagnostics vs DJIA and NASDAQ (1 year)
Source Burrill Company
47Diagnostics vs DJIA and NASDAQ (5 years)
Source Burrill Company
48The Changing Focus of Healthcare
49Confluence of Technology, Tools, and Knowledge
50140 Years of Drug Discovery Technology
1st generation
2nd generation
3rd generation
genomics
/
proteomics
cell pharmacology/
molecular biology
drugs against
natural products
targets identified
genetic engineering
and derivatives
from disease genes
receptors
chronic
degenerative
serendipity
disease associated
enzyme
with ageing,
Biotech drugs
inflammation,
cancer
New Therapeutic Cycles
lipid
lowerers
ACE-inhibitors
Source CMS, Lehman Brothers research
H2-antagonists
beta
blockers
NSAIDS
psychotropics
penicillins
sulphonamides
aspirin
51Innovation Gap Getting Wider
52The Cost of Developing a New Drug has Greatly
Increased
53Reasons for Clinical Attrition 1991-2000
54- How often are your discoveries accidental?
-almost always - -Kevin Sharer CEO of Amgen
55- Big and innovation are not two words we
usually put together. - -Kevin Sharer CEO of Amgen
56A Systems Biology Approach Follow the Pathways
57Analyzing the Molecular Profiles (Biosignatures)
of Body Functions in Health and Disease
The Molecular Basis of Biological Processes
The Molecular Heterogeneity of Disease
Individual Genetic Variation
Alterations in Disease
Disease Subtypes
Pharmaco- genetics
Disease Predisposition
New Targets for Dx, Rx, Vx
Right Rx for Disease
New Targets for Dx, Rx, Vx
PDx PRx
58RD Process of the Future
A Biotech / Pharma Company will only develop a
molecule when it is confident that the mechanism
of action works
59Pharmacogenomics and Biomarkers in Drug
Development
Drug Safety and Contraindications
- Differentiating pharmacokinetics and metabolism
- Determining personalized dosage
- Demonstration of efficacy for targeted
populations - Prospective hypothesis (e.g., EGFR receptor
targeted drugs) - Retrospective analysis (e.g., tamoxifen)
- Biomarkers as surrogate endpoints for trials
- Accelerating clinical development
- Enabling adaptive trials
60Safer, More Effective Drugs
61Pharma RD Outsourcing Accelerating
- Cost savings in FTEs, facilities and programs
continue to drive research (and increasingly
development) outsourcing to China and India - Dr. Reddys Aurigene Discovery Technologies Ltd.
Division (India) - Discovery and lead optimization for Forest
Laboratories for small molecule candidates in
obesity/metabolic disorders lead generation and
optimization for Merck Serono for small molecules
to treat autoimmune diseases - Nicholas Piramal (India)
- Discovery collaboration against two cancer
targets for Merck - Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd (India)
- Ranbaxy to undertake lead optimization, selection
and clinical trials through PoC in multi-year
collaboration with GSK - With Ranbaxy purchase by Daiichi Sankyo,
collaborations will move to other players - Hutchison Medipharma (China)
- Research collaboration in inflammatory disease
and cancer with Eli Lilly
62FDA Approves Updated Warfarin Prescribing
Today's approved labeling change is one step in
our commitment to personalized medicine. By using
modern science to get the right drug in the right
dose for the right patient, FDA will further
enhance the safety and effectiveness of the
medicines Americans depend on," said Commissioner
of Food and Drugs Andrew C. von Eschenbach, M.D.
- 2M patients in US start taking warfarin
(coumadin) each year - Complications due to mis-dosing cost an estimated
1.2B per year it is the second most common
pharmaceutical emergency room adverse event - Two gene variants CYP2C9 and VKORC1 are
biomarkers for warfarin metabolism, affecting
about 30 of patients taking the drug - Genelex, Clinical Data among those offering the
test
63Selected Targeted Treatments
- Gleevec (Novartis) - pH CML kinase inhibitor
- Iressa (AstraZeneca) EGFR tyrosine kinase
inhibitor - Tarceva (Genentech/OSI) HER1/EGFR inhibitor
- Erbitux (ImClone/BMS) HER1/EGFR inhibitor
- Avastin (Genentech) VEGF/VEGFR inhibitor
- Herceptin (Genentech) HER2 inhibitor
- BilDil (NitroMed) - heart failure in African
American patients - Other Semi Targeted Treatments (approved or
late stage trials) - Nexavar (Bayer/Onyx) multikinase inhibitor
- Tykerb (GSK) - ErbB-2/EGFR inhibitor
- Enzastaurin (Lilly) - PKC-Beta, AKT/P13 inhibitor
- Personalized cancer vaccines (Problematic
Development) - Favrille FavId for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
- Genitope MyVax for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
64Amgen -Kevin Sharer (CEO)
- How do you decide the areas of science most
promising? - How much do we understand the biology?
- What is our IP position how do we defend it?
- Do we have human safety efficacy data that
looks promising? - Competitively, where are we in the queue?
- Will there be markets, will there be people to
pay for it? - Conclusion -big decision is when you push the
button to go from PH II proof of concept studies
to PH III efficacy studies .now we are starting
to make hundreds of millions of dollars of
investments
65Burrill Personalized Medicine Index vs. DJIA
NASDAQ (1 year)
66Personalized Medicine shows growth for infectious
disease testing
67Global Market for Molecular Diagnostics
68Drug effectiveness varies from patient to patient
69Americans have strong attitudes toward genetic
testing
70Health not Sickness
- The World Health Organization defines health as
A state - of complete physical, mental and social
well-being and not - merely the absence of disease or infirmity
71The Obesity Epidemic
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
Overweight
0
Obese
1960-
1976-
1999-
2003-
1962
1980
2000
2004
Overweight and obese in adults 20-74 years old
72The Case for Wellness
- 30-60 of health plan claims are related to
health risks that are modifiable by nutrition,
exercise, stress reduction, etc. - Well-managed employer health and productivity
management programs return 6-15 for every dollar
spent - Cost of smoking healthcare cost of smoking over
a lifetime 220K per person 40 in healthcare
cost per pack of cigarettes smoked! - 67 of the US population is overweight or obese,
and 12 of healthcare costs are obesity-related - Source Wellness Councils of America
73Health and Wellness advances 2007-2008
- Global functional foods market expected to be
167B by 2010, growing 14 annually - Global nutraceuticals market 228B in 2007
unreimbursed! - Weight loss and weight management a huge, poorly
served market with opportunity for drug, device,
food/nutrition companies - Employer-sponsored wellness programs on the rise
so are legal issues around discrimination! - 86 of employers in North America offer employee
wellness plans only 25 in Europe, 21 in Asia - Where theres smokeyoure fired! Employers
aggressive stance on unhealthy behaviors under
legal scrutiny
74Wellness Changes Become Evident
- School meals obesity and health education/PE
- Organic and health food markets growing rapidly
- Nutrition labeling
- High fructose corn syrup/trans-fats destined to
be regulated - Customized food to treat specialized medical
conditions - Employee incentive programs/cost reduction tied
to fitness programs - but, mixed gains on alcohol reduction/drug
use/improved sexual health/reduced nicotine
consumption
7510 Key Trends for 2008 in Food, Nutrition and
Health
- Digestive Health - a wellness issue and the
biggest opportunity - Fruit and superfruit - the future of food and
health - The marketing power of "naturally healthy"
- Beauty foods - the newest niche
- Weight management more about maintaining than
losing - Mood food feels its way
- A tipping point for the premiumisation of health
- Healthy snacking for the "me" generation
- Kid's nutrition - connecting to multiple trends
is crucial - Are antioxidants the new probiotics?
Source 10 Key Trends in Food, Nutrition Health
2008,by Julian Mellentin, New Nutrition Business
76Food Industry Response to Nutritional Needs
77Nutraceuticals vs. DJIA NASDAQ (1 year)
Source Burrill Company
78Nutraceuticals vs. DJIA NASDAQ (5 years)
Source Burrill Company
79Traditional Medical Value Chain is changing !!
Universities Government Labs
Pharma Biotech Diagnostics Devices
Physicians Hospitals Pharmacy Other Caregivers
Personalized Wellness Coach, Fitness, Diet
Consumer Directed Payment Plans
Rich Health Information via Internet
Patient- Centered Care
80Healthcare Changes to Wellness (vs. sickness)
- Healthcare moves from one size fits all to the
three/four Ps - Personalization
- Prediction
- Prevention / disease preemption
- Patient Responsibility
- Increased life span (80s are new 60s 100s are
new 80s) - Health maintenance
- Fitness
- Eat for life
81and so, healthcare cost increases are on
everyones agenda
- Politicians/Congress/White House/Govt Leaders
- Payors/Reimbursors/Insurers
- Physicians/Providers
- Patients/Consumers
- and patients are empowered, have economic costs,
and really want to stay well!
82Current Healthcare System
Prescribers (Doctors)
Providers (Hospitals)
PatientsUsers
83Reimbursement
- Who is the payor?
- Government?
- Employers?
- Patients?
- Studies in comparative effectiveness who will
pay for this? - Evidentiary framework should not be left to
payors (CMS/HHS/Kaiser/Aetna, etc.)
Pharmaco-economic benefit tests?
84Efficacy
- Drug is 30 effective
- vs.
- Drug effective for 30 of the market
-
85Worldwide Global Pharmaceutical Sales
86Global Pharmaceutical Sales in 2007
Audited Market 2007 Sales Sales Growth (const US) Growth (const US)
Audited Market 2007 USbn Mkt Shr 2007 CAGR 6-Feb
Worldwide 663.50 100 6.1 7.8
North America 304.5 45.9 4.2 8.7
Europe 206.2 31.1 6.7 6.6
Asia 62.2 9.4 13.1 11.3
Japan 58.5 8.8 4.2 2.8
Latin America 32 4.8 12 13.4
10 Key Markets 529.5 79.8 5.1 7.4
All information is current as of Feb 26,
2008.Excludes unaudited markets, and Russia,
Ukraine and Belarus audited data. Sales cover
direct and indirect pharmaceutical channel
purchases in U.S. dollars from pharmaceutical
wholesalers and manufacturers. The figures above
include prescription and certain over-the-counter
data and represent manufacturer prices. Totals
may not add due to rounding. Source IMS Health
87Number of Products Approved 19822007
45
New Indications
40
35
Biotech Drugs
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
88Products in WW Development 2007 III and
Registration
571 Total
388 Risk-Adjusted to Approval
248 Total
208 Risk-Adjusted to Approval
Source BioCentury Publications
89Products in Phase III by Disease / Target Area
Source BioCentury
90Big New Markets
- Alzheimer's/memory
- Obesity/diabetes/metabolic disease
- Anti-aging
- Anti infectives (antibiotic resistance)
- Wellness (preventative/predictive cure)
91Generics Why is it Booming?
- Major blockbusters coming off patent
- Scale/globalization is key
- Emerging markets growing
- Fewer NCE approvals
- Little growth in primary care markets
92Some of the Best Selling Drugs are Losing Patent
Protection
Expiry Drug Name Company Estimated US sales peak in billions
2008 Risperdal Fosamax Johnson Johnson Merck 2.5 2.0
2009 Prevacid Topamax Abbot/Takeda Johnson Johnson 3.2 2.1
2010 Lipitor Effexor/XR Pfizer Wyeth 8.7 2.7
2011 Plavix Actos Zyprexa Bristol Myers/Sanofil Lilly/Takeda/Waston Lilly 5.0 4.4 2.6
2012 Seroquel Singulair/AR AstraZeneca Merck 4.1 3.4
93Projected Revenue Losses from Patent Expiry
(billions)
Source Sanford C. Bernstein Co.
94How the Industry has Changed
- FDA being more risk averse
- NCE approvals in 2007 down 40 over 2006
- Approvable letters on the rise (requiring further
studies) - Marketed products receiving label restrictions
- Pharmacovigilence is big driver today
- New FDA guidelines
- Phase III trials now require 2500 subjects US
(1500 Intl) - Stalling diabetes startups for Type 2 diabetes
95.but we are not without major issues
- Off-label promotions
- Follow-on biologics (biosimliars/generic
biopharmaceuticals) - Drug recalls
- QC Heparin
- Modernizing clinical trials
- Duke/FDA (Rob Califf)
- Patent reform
- Co-pays going up/Congressional inquiry
- Polypill, especially for developing world
- Financing innovation
96On the Regulatory/Patent/Policy FrontGovts are
our Partners!
- Patent reform (PTO proposals to restrict claims
examined in a single application and limit
continuation applications) - FDA resources PDUFA IV authorization
- follow-on biologics (biogenerics)
- drug safety
- theranostics
- food safety (pet food)
- Biofuels renewable and alternative energy
sources through use of biotechnology - Medicare Prescription Drug Price Negotiation Act
Non-interference (proposal to require Medicare
interference) - Sarbanes Oxley compliance reducing the burden
on small companies - SBIR eligibility
- Agbio/ GMOs
- Stem cell research federal funding
- Passing of Genetic Information Non-Discrimination
Act (GINA)
97Major Government Initiatives in Biotechnology
- Canada
- EU Scandinavia, Germany, UK, Spain, Italy,
Switzerland - Eastern Europe
- China
- India
- Japan
- Korea
- Malaysia
- Singapore
- UAE (Dubai/Abu Dhabi), Bahrain and Kuwait
- Israel
- Latin America (esp. Chile/Brazil/Argentina)
- Australia/New Zealand
98Biotech and Healthcare are Global Businesses
UK/EUROPE
CANADA
ISRAEL
USA
JAPAN
MIDDLE EAST
CHINA
ASEAN
INDIA
LATIN AMERICA
AUS/NZ
99World Market for Health and Wellness is Expanding
- China and India have large populations, growing
wealth and middle class and increased demand for
high quality healthcare - Additional growth markets Middle East, Latin
America, South Africa, Russia, Eastern Europe - Burden of disease is changing in developed and
developing countries chronic diseases
(cardiovascular, diabetes, cancer, CNS et al.) on
the rise everywhere - Aging populations around the world
- National healthcare and private payor/employer
models are converging and all facing issues of
affordability, quality and equal access - Consumers becoming an important factor in the
healthcare equation
100Medical Tourism on the Rise
- Market for medical tourism in 2007 about 50B,
expected to grow to over 100B by 2012 - Originally cosmetic/elective procedures, now
CABG, heart valve replacement, orthopedic
including hip/knee replacement, cancer,
transplant, etc. - Last year 500,000 Americans traveled overseas for
surgery - Cost including travel 2-3x lower than in US
- Patient financing programs becoming available,
some insurers providing incentives - Magazines, associations, conferences
101Medical Tourism Growth Drivers
- 40 of consumers say they would travel outside
the country for medical treatment, if the quality
was comparable and the cost was cut in half. - - Deloitte
- Medical Tourism 2008 Survey of Health Care
- Foreign health care providers often have
physicians with - internationally respected credentials
- - National center for Policy Analysis
- Medical Tourism Offers Hope To Control Health
Care Cost - As always there are challenges, but from
humanity's standpoint - (medical tourism) is something we ought to
celebrate." - - Harvard Business School
- The Rise of Medical Tourism
Source Health Travel Guides
102Medical Tourism Growth Drivers
- India
- Govt investing 3.6 Billion in medical tourism
infrastructure. - McKinsey estimates Indian medical tourism at
2.3B by 2012. - Mexico
- StarMedica hospital groups built 7 hospitals in
last 5 years - AmeriMed opening 10 new hospitals by 2012
- Grupo Angeles (largest private hospital group in
Mexico) spending 700 million to build 15
hospitals in the next 3 years - Singapore
- More internationally accredited facilities than
any other country. - Thailand
- One Bangkok hospital (Bumrungrad) served over
500,000 health travelers last year. - Costa Rica
- One in five visitors is a medical tourist
Source Health Travel Guides
103China
- Rapid growth of pharmaceutical sales in China
- Over 70B in 2007, growing about 20
- China will be one of worlds largest pharma
markets within 10 years - Biotech 5-Year Plan focus areas
- Vaccine
- Diagnostic
- Innovative drugs
- Modern TCM
- Bioengineering and biologic manufacturing
- Agbio/Biofuel/Industrial biotech
- Strong science infrastructure
104China, continued
- Regulatory and IP Protection making some progress
- Dealing with corruption
- But still many safety and quality issues
heparin, pet food, lead in products - IPOs had a breakout year
- 3SBio, Simcere, WuXi, Fosun, Tongjitang, China
Napstar Chain Drugstore - MA Activity
- Chinese companies out shopping for (global)
acquisitions e.g., WuXi/Apptec
105China, continued
- Looking ahead
- China will move up the value chain, becoming more
fully integrated and developing innovative
pharmaceuticals - Partnering opportunities with multinational firms
will abound - CRO services will become increasingly
competitive, with consolidation occuring - Rapid growth of China market will promoted
branded generics and strong local pharma sales
and marketing companies, especially outside major
metropolitan areas (Beijing/Shanghai) - China will develop FDA-compliant generics and
biologics manufacturers to gain access to the
global market - More domestic and Hong Kong listings of China
life sciences companies as Chinas capital market
matures
106India
- Indian economy continues to experience rapid
growth - Rising middle class, growth in consumer spending
and healthcare spending - More than 280 biotech companies, growing more
than 35 per year for the past 4 years, a 2B
market in annual revenue - Key Exports Vaccines, CRAMS services, generics
- India has highest number of FDA-approved
manufacturing plants - Leading the way in biosimilars
- Moving from cost-savings to market expansion to
innovation - Healthcare projected to grow at 15 CAGR , to a
350B market in 2022 - New disease burdens diabetes, cardiovascular,
cancer - Medical device opportunities in imaging,
diagnostic and surgical devices to treat these
disease areas - Retail healthcare growing pharmacy chains, OTC
medicines, health and wellness (functional foods,
supplements, traditional medicines)
107India, continued
- Ready access to growth capital
- MA for global reach and access to world markets,
including developing world - High liquidity and increased investment caps
resulted in significant foreign direct investment - Access to early stage venture capital very
limited - National strategy for biotech
- 1.6B in support pledged from government over 5
years - Increases in research budgets for life sciences
- Improved IP protection, walking the line between
protecting corporate investments and access to
medicines
108US RD dominance dwindles
- US citations 205,000
- Non-US citations 250,000
China, South Korea, India growth outpacing others
Source NSF/Thompson Scientific
109Europe
- Strong first half 2007, lackluster second half
- US sub-prime issues affect European market
confidence - Three Biotech 100M IPOs Addex (Switzerland),
Ablynx (Belgium) and Pronova Biopharma (Norway) - Continued harmonization in regulatory environment
between EMEA and US FDA orphan drug regs,
advanced therapies (e.g., gene therapy, stem
cells, tissue engineering) - Patients increasingly unhappy with denial of care
and waiting times in national health services - Denmark-Sweden Medicon Valley strong
healthcare, biopharma cluster
110Summary An increasingly borderless world.
- Global healthcare systems under intense pressure
will undergo transformational change in the next
10 years - New business models emerging in all sectors from
biopharmaceutical discovery, development and
manufacturing to healthcare delivery to retail
consumer healthcare solutions - Aging populations, growing demand for quality
healthcare in emerging growth countries will mean
continued high demand - Consumers around the world playing an increasing
role in healthcare decision-making - Enormous opportunities to bring business value in
this changing world, leveraging global capital,
talent and markets
111Agbio Increases Crop Productivity and Improves
Quality
- Cuts pesticide use
- Decreases carbon emissions
- Lessens tillage/land erosion
- Increases drought tolerance
- Increases nitrogen efficiency
- Improves Nutritional Attributions
112The Demands for Agriculture Stay the Same
More food on less land with half the water.
Source 1999-United Nations
113Market Overview Agriculture
114Global Area of Biotech Crops 1996 to 2005 By Crop
115AgBio vs. DJIA NASDAQ (1 years)
Source Burrill Company
116AgBio vs. DJIA NASDAQ (5 year)
Source Burrill Company
117What We Can Learn From Agbio
- Be proactive, get ahead of the issues
- Engage all parties, respect their issues (they
may be right) - Do not be defensive
- Find common ground
- Energy security, sustainability, reduced
environmental foot print - It is not about the science it is about the
political, social, economic and environmental
issues - Advance opportunities where appropriate
118Industrial/Bio-fuels/Bio-energy
- Less reliance on fossil fuel, more reliance on
renewable sources - Grain ethanol is a transition product,
cellulosic bio-fuels will be the norm provided
transformation costs are reduced - Synthetic biology - genetically engineered
organisms to produce agricultural commodities,
waste management, factories of pharmaceuticals,
etc.
1192005 Was The Tipping Point For Industrial
Biotechnology
- Perfect Storm
- Energy security
- Global Warming
- Economics
- Political Will
- Market Pull
- Ready Technology
Biofuels Sustainability
2008
119
120Exciting Time Since
- VC investments increased dramatically
- Oil companies invested in technology and
infrastructure - Supportive legislation
- Frenzy to access technology
- Frothy Pre-money Valuations
- No success stories
121What Has Happened Since?
- Ethanol plant construction exploded (All corn
based) - Now have 113 in operation, 77 under construction
- Production at 6 billion gallons, potential for
12B - 16 cellulosic ethanol plants under construction
- Price of feed grains
- 2 historically, topped 6.00 (corn)
- 20 of corn crop today, 50 in two years !
- 13 of soybeans going to biodiesel
- The focus has been on biofuels Ethanol
- A new biofuels debate has emerged GHG emissions,
grain shortages
122World Ethanol Production
Source ZERO
123Projected Feedstock Available for Biofuels
Source Oak Ridge National Laboratory
1242007 Great Year But with Storm Clouds Forming
- Perfect Storm
- Energy security
- Global Warming
- Economics
- Political Will
- Market pull
- Ready technology
- Second Perfect Storm
- Social
- Economic
- Environmental
125Storm Clouds
- Commodity prices drive up food prices
- Acreage Swap between Corn and Soybeans
- The linkage Corn Soybeans Palm Oil -Energy
- Exaggerated by imminent US lead recession
- Economic discontinuities caused by speed of
adoption
126Social, Economic and Environmental Issues
Dominate 2008
- US recession
- How long how deep?
- Fewer IPOs, Fewer Acquisitions
- What will big oil do ?
- Food crops for fuel
- Access to project financing
- Funding of small technology companies
- 5M, 20M, 100 M
- Will we get the project financing needed given
the economic and political uncertainty - IPOs early in year critical several good ones
ready to file, some even have revenues! - Uncertainty a big risk
127Opportunities in BioEnergy
- From an investor stand point Grain ethanol is
dead - Cellulosic sourcing of sugars will be hot
- Increasing interest in alternative fuels
- Butanols
- Alkanes
- Lots of opportunities outside biofuels
- Bioplastics / Biomaterials
- APIs
- Specialty chemicals
128So lets look at where we are and what happened
during the last year...
129Burrill Select vs. DJIA NASDAQ (1 year)
Source Burrill Company
130Large, Mid, Small Cap (1 year )
Source Burrill Company
131Key Industry Stats Biotech 2008
USA Europe Asia/Pacific Canada Total
Sales / Rev. 89B 12B 3.5B 1.5B 106B
AnnualRD 23B 4B 0.4B 0.8B 28B
Number ofCompanies 1,450 1,600 740 450 4300
Number ofEmployees 131,000 60,000 13,000 7000 201,000
Number ofPublic Co.s 370 160 140 75 745
Market Cap 455B 30B 50B 12B 547B
132Pharma vs. Biotech Industry Market Cap (B)
Company 10/10/2008 12/31/2007 10/10/2007
Pfizer 124 155 169
Johnson Johnson 194 191 190
Merck 67 127 112
Eli Lilly 50 60 65
Bristol-Myers Squibb 41 53 57
Pfizer/Merck 201 282 281
Total US Biotech 465 455 482
Industry 2.3x 1.6x 1.7x
133US Biotech Market Cap 2007 2008
134.And these small Life Science companies are
becoming increasingly important as a source of
value creation and innovation in the healthcare
sector
Top Five US Pharma vs. Total Biotech Market Cap
Market Value of selected Big Pharma acquisitions
of public Biotechs (2005-Oct 2008)
Source Capital IQ, Windhover, Burrill Analysis
135Top Five US Pharma vs. Total Biotech Market Cap
(1 year)
136Significant Mergers and Acquisitions in the Last
Year
Pharma/Specialty
Shionogi/Sciele 11 billion
Novartis/Alcon 10.4 billion
Boehringer/Actimis 515 million
Teva/CoGenesys 400 million
Pharma/Biotech
Roche/Genentech 44 billion On the table
Takeda/Millennium 8.2 billion
Eli Lilly/ImClone 6.2 billion
Eisai/MGI Pharma 3.5 billion
Pfizer/Encysive 195 million
GSK/Sirtris 720 million
GSK/Reliant 1.65 billion
Biotech/Biotech
Invitrogen/Applied Biosystems 6.7 billion
ViroPharma/Lev Pharma 618 million
Celgene/Pharmion 2.7 billion
Galderma/CollaGenex 420 million
Inverness/BBI 100 million
Inverness/Paradigm 230 million
Diagnostics
Roche/Ventana 3.4 billion
Hologic/Third Wave 580 million
Medtech
Kinetic Concepts/ LifeCell 1.7 billion
Fresenius/APP Pharma 3.7 billion
CSL/Talecris 3.1 billion
Getinge AB/Datascope 841 million
137Cross-border MA picks up
138Significant Partnerings in the Last Year
Pharma/Biotech
Takeda/Amgen 1.78 billion
Takeda/Anylam 1 billion
GKS/Synta 965 million
GKS/Valeant 820 million
Astellas/CoMentis 760 million
GSK/Tolerx 750 million
BMS/PDL Pharma 710 million
Pfizer/Medivation 725 million
Biotech/Biotech
Genzyme/Isis Pharma 1.1 billion
Celgene/Array 1.04 billion
Nycomed/Immunomedics 620 million
Celgene/Acceleron 560 million
Genzyme/PTC Theraputics 437 million
139US Biotech Financings (M) 1 year
 Q4 2007 Q1 2008 Q2 2008 Q3 2008 October 07-08 October 06-07
Public
IPO 371 6 0 0 377 2,020
Follow-ons 3,128 701 312 693 4,834 5,917
PIPEs 357 370 203 308 1,238 1,671
Debt 60 1,622 360 408 3,440 8,426
Private
VC 963 837 1,007 1085 3,892 4,532
Other 171 20 226 20 437 562
Â
Subtotal 5,050 3,556 2,108 2,514 14,218 23,128
Â
Partnering 7,012 3,091 4,141 2,962 17,212 23,686
Â
Total 12,062 6,647 6,249 5,476 31,430 46,814
140US Biotech Financings (M) 2003-2008
 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 08 to date
Public
IPO 456 1,701 819 920 2,041 6
Follow-ons 3,536 3,388 4,194 5,766 6,311 1,706
PIPEs 2,051 2,417 2,376 2,027 1,818 881
Debt 7,170 8,418 5,565 13,978 6,569 3,380
Private
VC 2,841 3,733 3,518 4,236 4,445 2,929
Other 294 269 1,114 425 611 266
Â
Subtotal 16,348 19,927 17,586 27,352 21,975 9,168
Â
Partnering 8,933 10,933 17,268 19,796 23,365 10,200
Â
Total 25,281 30,860 34,854 47,148 45,340 19,368
141Capital Raised 1980-3Q 2008
142Biotechs Five cycles Length of Rallies/Droughts
in Months
143IPOs Not What They Used To Be
144IPOs Not What They Used to Be
Number of IPOs Positive sinceIPO Negativesince IPO Acquired or delisted Amount Raised( Million) Average D change Since IPO
2003 7 0 3 4 438 (95)
2004 29 4 16 9 1,628 (32)
2005 17 2 10 5 819 (48)
2006 19 4 12 3 920 (35)
2007 2008 28 1 2 0 25 1 1 0 2,041 6 (49) (52)
Total 101 12 67 22 5,852 (52)
Includes over-allotments As of 10/10/08
Source Burrill Company
145Finance and Capital Markets
The global financial markets have created
additional opportunities for companies to look
outside their borders for financing
- Europeans on NASDAQ/NYSE
- Chinese on NYSE
- Americans on AIM/Euronext/SWX
- Other markets are available
- Mothers (Tokyo)
- DFX (Dubai)
- Hong Kong
146Financing Circa 2008
- Development stage (B/C/D rounds) available but
expensive - Equipment/facility financing (even IP)
- IPOs fewer and later stage operating companies
with revenues/profits - More PIPEs
- Reverse mergers into public companies
- SPACs
- Equity lines of credit
- Shelf registration/registered direct
147Wall Streets ImplosionWhat does it mean to us?
- Its a sea change, not a temporary blip
- Weve had 30-40 years of relatively easy access
to relatively cheap capital - That game is OVER! Capital markets permanently
restructured - Access to capital
- More difficult to find (IB resources for
micro-cap stocks decreased) - More expensive
- Buyside interest/resources reduced (Hedge funds
gone) - VC/private investors (deep pockets/short arms)
business is challenging no IPOs for exits - Big Pharma not as eager (things will be cheaper
if they wait) - But, there is an alternative view
148Alternative view of Capital Markets
- This too will pass
- Markets reconstruct, reorganize, interest returns
- New group of boutique investment banking firms
emerge (like the old 4 horsemen HQ, Robbie
Stephens, Alex Brown, Montgomery) - Genentech/ImClone put big back into buy side,
money redeployed - Capital market efficiency Returns improve,
drawing more capital back into markets
149How Does All This Impact Entrepreneurial
Start-ups in 2008
- VC Angels are hesitant to invest
- Business models are changing
- More financing of projects
- Higher bar for regulatory approval
- Reimbursement compression
- Globality essential
- Capital efficiency required
- BUT
- Rate of start-ups around the world are
increasing (go figure)
150The old models are not working what is ahead?
- Continued rapid pace of innovation in medicine
(stem cells, engineered materials, bio-nano,
etc.) - Development of personalized medicine and targeted
therapies - Consumers gain power and medicine becomes
patient centric - Increased focus on wellness, not sickness
- Globalization
- New business models emerge
- Virtual integration of pharma/biotech/service
providers (VIPCO not FIPCO)
151Changing Business Models
FIPCO (Fully Integrated Pharma Co.)
VIPCO (Virtually Integrated Pharma Co.)
Partnerships
Sales Distribution
CSO
Manufacturing
CMO
Clinical Development
CROs
Preclinical Support
Preclinical CRO
RD
Academia, Scientific, Institutions
152Virtual Pharma New Organizational Models for
Leverage of Open-Source Services
- PharmaCommons integration of rapidly expanding
open-source datasets - Discovery, toxicology, clinical trials
- Network of web-based turn-key contract services
- China/India/other low cost (RD, clinical
development and manufacturing) sites will
dominate - New role of BigPharma as integrator to generate
value across the entire disease episode spectrum - Wellness to terminal care
Source George Poste/Burrill Company
153So the predictions for 2008/2009
154The Predictions for Biotech in 2008/2009(regardle
ss of who wins the US election)
- Sales of products will continue to increase, but
reimbursement becomes more challenging - Stricter regulatory oversight, tougher to get
products to the market in US/Europe - Regulators
- Raising the bar for innovation, theranostics
- Drug safety will continue to be a major issue
(Pharmacovigilence is the name of the game) - US Congress aiming to add power to Medicare to
negotiate what it pays for drugs - US Congress may reduce the capital gains
differential (bad for the capital raising side of
the industry)
155The Predictions for Biotech in 2008/2009(continue
d)
- Biofuels boom in non-food crops
- Ag/Animal Health see increase because of world
food crisis - Biotechs globality increases with US dominance
continuing to decrease - US research engine faces challenging times
- Non-health care aspects of biotech also becoming
more dominant as industrial, biofuels, ag
increase in importance - Clusters are redefined away from geography to
virtual clusters (diseases, pathways, markets,
unique industry segments) - Business models continue to evolve more virtual
but more consolidation too
156The Predictions for Biotech in 2008/2009
(continued)
- Both big Pharma and big Biotech will be competing
for companies with advanced product pipelines - Capital Markets
- 4Q08 very difficult financing environment
worldwide - 2009 25 billion will be raised by the US
biotechs (half of 08) - Europe will lag US, few IPOs and difficult VC
financings - China, India, other economies continue to finance
biotech Cos - Companies arbitrage value differences globally
157So
Go for it
158Biotech 2008 A 20/20 Vision to 2020
G. Steven Burrill Chief Executive Officer,
Burrill Company The Burrill Indiana Life
Sciences Meeting October 21, 2008