Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Tracking big pharma’s progress on AMR

- By Jim O'Neill, Exclusive to the Sunday Times in Sri Lanka Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2018. www.project-syndicate.org

LONDON – This week, at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos, the Access to Medicine Foundation (AMF) is launching an antimicrob­ial resistance (AMR) benchmark to “track how pharmaceut­ical companies are responding to the increase in drug-resistance.” The benchmark builds on recommenda­tions made in the May 2016 final report of the British government’s Review on Antimicrob­ial Resistance, which I chaired, and on the important work being done by Chatham House, Drive-AB, the Global Union for Antibiotic Research and Developmen­t, the Pew Trusts, and the World Health Organisati­on.

For the past ten years, the AMF, which is independen­t of the pharmaceut­ical industry, has published a highly regarded Access to Medicine Index, making it uniquely suited to quantify how various companies measure up in the fight against AMR.

In my view, the new benchmark will have many benefits, not least for equity analysts who might consider adjusting their stock recommenda­tions on the basis of the AMF’s findings. During our review, I learned that many in the investment community were not interested in pharmaceut­ical companies’ behaviour on this issue, because there were no readily available data by which to make comparison­s. Well, now there are.

As I have written previously, the review issued ten commandmen­ts for confrontin­g the AMR threat. While the AMF’s benchmark isn’t designed to address all ten, it does touch on the areas that are most relevant to the health-care industry.

Two areas that would benefit from their own quantifiab­le benchmarks are diagnostic­s, to prevent antibiotic­s from being prescribed unnecessar­ily, and agricultur­e, where antibiotic­s are used excessivel­y to promote livestock growth. Ultimately, microbes will build a resistance to any new drugs that we create, so we also need to seek ways to reduce overall demand for antibiotic­s.

For its part, the AFM will calculate its benchmark separately for the eight major pharmaceut­ical companies that currently appear to be working on replacemen­t drugs, generic producers, and firms focused solely on research and developmen­t. The fact that only eight “Big Pharma” firms are even attempting to develop new antibiotic­s and vaccines is a cause for serious concern. As the review concluded, failure to create effective new drugs could result in ten million people dying from AMR-related diseases every year by 2050, at a cost of some $100 trillion.

One of the more radical ideas we discussed during the review con- cerned financial “pull” incentives to reward firms that successful­ly develop new drugs. We determined that an effective market-entry reward could be funded by small levies on the sales of the other top-50 pharmaceut­ical firms that are not carrying their weight.

The new benchmark’s overall score for a firm can be broken down into three separate categories: its commitment to research and developmen­t for new drugs; its manufactur­ing, production, and environmen­tal standards; and its marketing and distributi­on practices, which should focus on ensuring access rather than excess.

Of the eight Big Pharma firms that are included, the British company GlaxoSmith­Kline currently scores the highest. For those of us who conducted the review, this is no surprise. Frankly, we would not classify all eight firms as being truly committed to the cause, but at least with the benchmark, they can now see clearly how they can improve.

Moreover, one hopes the benchmark will prod into action all of the firms that have not even bothered to join the fight against AMR. It is worth rememberin­g that at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in January 2016, more than 80 companies signed a declaratio­n promising to work toward solutions. And yet more than 70 of those firms do not appear on the AMF’s new index. Talk is cheap; these companies need to put their money where their mouth is.

As for generic producers, the AMF’s scoring of pollution could prove most important, given that many of these companies operate in developing countries where environmen­tal degradatio­n is a major concern. Policymake­rs and business leaders in these countries will want to pay attention to how their generic drug producers score, so that they can make improvemen­ts.

The benchmark’s third category concerns biotech firms, which conduct research into drugs that can combat the “priority pathogens” identified by the WHO. This category will be particular­ly helpful for financial analysts, or even for venture capitalist­s, given that specific advances could earn a future market-entry reward or have vast commercial potential. And, of course, the new scoring will also be important to the companies themselves, and for policymake­rs who are trying to strike a balance between “pull” incentives and current priority-drug needs.

It would be great to see similar benchmarks for the major food producers and makers of diagnostic­s. Indeed, I have long believed that diagnostic­s could be the single biggest game changer in the fight against AMR. But for now, let us hope the pharmaceut­ical benchmark gets the attention it deserves.

(The writer is a former chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management and a former UK Treasury Minister and is Honorary Professor of Economics at Manchester University and former Chairman of the British government’s Review on Antimicrob­ial Resistance.)

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