Tight funding strains traditional drug development

Updated on 20 June 2012

E&Y report says longer-term sustainability remains challenging, with the traditional funding-and-innovation model under unprecedented strain

Tight funding strains traditional drug development

The report finds that drug R&D needs a new approach that is iterative, fast, adaptive, cost-efficient and open

Singapore: The global biotechnology industry showed a second straight year of increasingly stable financial performance in 2011, according to Ernst & Young's 26th annual biotech report, Beyond borders: global biotechnology report 2012. Established biotech markets registered more than 10 percent revenue growth for the first time since the start of the global financial crisis.

However, longer-term sustainability remains challenging, with the traditional funding-and-innovation model for pre-commercial biotech firms under unprecedented strain and the industry's efforts to date to "do more with less" uncertain to deliver significant productivity gains.

"In this capital-constrained environment, the inefficiency and duplication of the drug R&D paradigm is an indulgence we can no longer afford," says Glen Giovannetti, Ernst & Young's Global Life Sciences Leader. "More than ever, the industry needs to remove duplication, encourage pre-competitive collaboration, pool data and allow researchers to learn in real time."

Key results highlighted in the report include:

Revenue stabilizes: Companies in the industry's established biotech centers (US, Europe, Canada and Australia) achieved revenues of US$83.4 billion in 2011, a 10% increase from 2010 on a normalized basis (after adjusting for the acquisition of three large US-based biotechs by non-biotech buyers).

R&D rebounds: After slashing R&D spending in 2009 and increasing it modestly by 2% in 2010, the industry grew R&D by a healthy 9% (on a normalized basis) in 2011.

Previous 1

Leave a Reply

Post Comment

Special Features

Survey Box

Chinese Bird Flu H5N7

Have Chinese scientists done the right thing by fusing human and avian flu strains to create new killer viruses?

Send this article by email

X