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Drug giants seek help to cut costs

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Pharmaceutical companies should “externalise” their drug development programmes by working with biotech companies to cut the costs of early stage development, a study has found.

The Morgan Stanley report said that pharmaceutical giants such as AstraZeneca and Sanofi-Aventis should address the cost of high-failure rates of experimental drugs by developing licensing agreements with biotech firms that can provide experimental products at a fraction of the cost of in-house development.

The report found that introducing products from smaller firms would cut failure rates and boost profits while improving safety during the development stage.

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Morgan Stanley said the cost of failure for drug companies has risen from an estimated $150 million (£93.8m) per drug ten years ago to $2 billion (£1.25bn) in the current climate, prompting pharmaceutical firms to explore new avenues in order to cut costs.

The introduction of externally sourced products should only be introduced once they have reached mid-stage phase 2 clinical trials in humans, by which time the data allow far greater understanding of safety, the report said.

The report said that AstraZeneca and Sanofi-Aventis were most likely to develop licensing agreements with smaller biotech companies, while rivals Bayer and GlaxoSmithKline would also see a rise in valuations from the new strategy.

Copyright Press Association 2010
Morgan Stanley






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