Business World

Drug approvals hit 21-year high

US FDA green-lights 46 novel drugs versus 22 in 2016

-

US drug approvals hit a 21-year high in 2017, with 46 novel medicines winning a green light — more than double the previous year — while the figure also rose in the European Union (EU). The EU recommende­d 92 new drugs including generics, up from 81, and China laid out plans to speed up approvals in what is now the world’s second biggest market behind the United States.

LONDON — US drug approvals hit a 21-year high in 2017, with 46 novel medicines winning a green light — more than double the previous year — while the figure also rose in the European Union (EU).

The EU recommende­d 92 new drugs including generics, up from 81, and China laid out plans to speed up approvals in what is now the world’s second biggest market behind the United States.

Yet the world’s biggest drug makers saw average returns on their research and developmen­t spending fall, reflecting more competitiv­e pressures and the growing share of new products now coming from younger biotech companies.

Consultanc­y Deloitte said last month that projected returns at 12 of the world’s top drug makers were at an eight-year low of only 3.2%.

Many of the drugs receiving a green light in 2017 were for rare diseases and sub- types of cancer, which often target very small population­s, although they can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Significan­tly, the US drug tally of 46 does not include the first of a new wave of cell and gene therapies from Novartis, Gilead Sciences and Spark Therapeuti­cs that were approved in 2017 under a separate category.

US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) Commission­er Scott Gottlieb has hailed these products as “a whole new scientific paradigm for the treatment of

serious diseases.” However, there is debate as to how cash-strapped health care systems will pay for them.

Under Mr. Gottlieb, the FDA has taken advantage of policy changes implemente­d in recent years to accelerate the drug approval process.

Procedures such as the agency’s “breakthrou­gh therapy” designatio­n have cut review times and helped to stimulate competitio­n by adding multiple new drugs that often work in a similar way.

A wide choice of medicines with the same mechanism of action can be a double-edged sword for manufactur­ers, since it gives insurers and government­s ammunition to drive down prices.

Pfizer and Merck’s new diabetes drug Steglatro, for example, was the fourth product of its kind to win a green light in the US, while Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic was the sixth of its type. Both were approved in December.

In cancer, AstraZenec­a’s Imfinzi was the fifth medicine to target a key protein found on the body’s immune cells when it won approval last May.

For the current year, companies have more new products waiting in the wings, although the pace of FDA approvals may be tempered by the fact that several drugs that had been expected to be cleared in the first quarter of 2018 were actually approved in 2017.

In Europe, meanwhile, the focus will be on any disruption or delays to the approval process as the European Medicines Agency prepares to relocate from London to Amsterdam as a result of Britain’s decision to leave the EU. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines