Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

China’s scientific revolution

- By Joseph Jimenez

BEIJING – The Chinese economy has undergone radical transforma­tion in recent years and is now laying the groundwork for impressive advances in science and technology. In particular, China is setting itself up to be a major player in the fight against disease, and there are many reasons to believe that the country will play a central role in the life-sciences research of the future.

For starters, according to a report in McKinsey Quarterly, China spends more than $200 billion on research annually, a level of investment that is second only to the United States. Chinese President Xi Jinping has positioned science-based innovation near the top of the national agenda, with the government’s 13th FiveYear Plan prioritizi­ng complex projects in emerging fields like brain research, gene science, big data, and medical robotics.

China is devoting so much to medical research in part because the country has significan­t unmet medical needs. By 2050, the Chinese population over age 65 is expected to increase by about 190 million. Meanwhile, chronic illnesses now account for more than 80% of China’s disease burden. So it is no surprise that China is already the world’s second largest pharmaceut­ical market, or that its innovation expenditur­e, according to the McKinsey Quarterly report, is expected to reach $1 trillion by 2020.

Another reason to expect a Chinese research revolution is that China now graduates more university students in the fields of science, technology, engineerin­g, and mathematic­s than any other country – about 2.5 million students per year, or about five times more than the US. In science and engineerin­g alone, China generates nearly 30,000 PhDs annually.

At the same time, government incentives are luring Chinese scientists who have been working abroad – many with top-tier Western institutio­ns – back home. From its inception in 2008 through mid-2014, this “Thousand Talents” program has attracted more than 4,000 returnees.

These trends clearly indicate that China has a real opportunit­y to become a major force in global pharmaceut­icals research, and that there will soon come a time when breakthrou­gh innovation occurs in China on a regular basis.

Global pharmaceut­ical companies have taken notice. My own company has been working in research and developmen­t in China for ten years. Back in 2006, we opened the first integrated R&D facility in the country, and the largest among internatio­nal firms. And we recently opened a new R&D centre in Shanghai’s Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park.

In Shanghai, premier scientists – many having returned to China from major research centres like Harvard Medical School and MIT – will focus on diseases that are endemic to the Chinese population. These include lung, liver, and gastric cancers, as well as other liver diseases, such as chronic hepatitis B, liver fibrosis, and cirrhosis. These diseases disproport­ionately affect people in China. For example, the incidence of hepatitis B in China is nearly 30 times higher than in the US; stomach and liver cancer rates are 11-18 times higher than in the US or Europe.

Thanks to advances in recent years, scientists can now identify epigenetic modificati­on enzymes that regulate gene activities. This area of research is especially promising in the search for effective new oncologica­l therapies. And by better understand­ing how these diseases manifest in Chinese patients, the industry is honing targeted therapies that can then be introduced in other settings worldwide.

China could very well set the global standard for using epigenetic­s to gain a better understand­ing of the underlying causes of diseases. In China, Novartis scientists alone are already running 15 drug discovery projects at different stages, and this pace of developmen­t will only accelerate.

I am inspired by China’s potential for making landmark scientific discoverie­s. As the country becomes increasing­ly important to global R&D, its contributi­ons will be a boon for the fight against disease, both in China and worldwide. (The writer is the CEO of Novartis.)

Courtesy : Project Syndicate, 2016. Exclusive to the Sunday Times.www.

project-syndicate.org

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