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Leading Pharmaceutical Innovation [electronic resource] : Trends and Drivers for Growth in the Pharmaceutical Industry / by Oliver Gassmann, Gerrit Reepmeyer, Maximilian von Zedtwitz.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2004Edition: 1st ed. 2004Description: XI, 178 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783540247814
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 658.514
LOC classification:
  • HD28-70
Online resources:
Contents:
I. Innovation as a Key Success Factor in the Pharmaceutical Industry -- II. Pharmaceutical Innovation: The Case of Switzerland -- III. The Science and Technology Challenge: How to Find New Drugs -- IV. The Pipeline Management Challenge: How to Shape the Innovation-Flow -- V. The Outsourcing and Internationalization Challenge: How to Harness Outside Innovation -- VI. Management Answers to Pharmaceutical R&D Challenges -- VII. Future Directions and Trends -- VIII. Appendices -- Authors.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: Pharmaceutical innovation is like gambling at roulette, only the stakes are higher. Considerably higher, since the most recent estimates put the costs of drug development at US$ 800 million to US$ 1 billion - per drug! This is equivalent to the price tag of the Empire State Building, when it was for sale a few years ago. In 2001, the major US and European pharmaceutical companies invested more than US$ 30 billion in R&D, at a higher R&D­ to-sales ratio than virtually any other industry, including chemicals, auto­ mobiles, electronics, aerospace, and computers. Delivering a blockbuster drug is the Holy Grail for any pharmaceutical company. But in the last decade the rules of developing blockbusters seem to have changed. On the one hand, more sophisticated screening technolo­ gies, genetic engineering, and expanding networks with biotechnology companies increase the probability of commercial success. Critical success factors include the discovery phase and a stronger outside-in orientation in the early innovation phase. After the implosion of the high-tech stock mar­ ket, biotechnology and other technology-driven opportunities may have lost some of their attractiveness for big pharma: a pipeline of solid and predictable innovations seems to be the highest goal of most pharmaceuti­ cal companies again. On the other hand, despite significant investments in pipeline management and novel technologies, there is still no recipe for ensuring a blockbuster hit.
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I. Innovation as a Key Success Factor in the Pharmaceutical Industry -- II. Pharmaceutical Innovation: The Case of Switzerland -- III. The Science and Technology Challenge: How to Find New Drugs -- IV. The Pipeline Management Challenge: How to Shape the Innovation-Flow -- V. The Outsourcing and Internationalization Challenge: How to Harness Outside Innovation -- VI. Management Answers to Pharmaceutical R&D Challenges -- VII. Future Directions and Trends -- VIII. Appendices -- Authors.

Pharmaceutical innovation is like gambling at roulette, only the stakes are higher. Considerably higher, since the most recent estimates put the costs of drug development at US$ 800 million to US$ 1 billion - per drug! This is equivalent to the price tag of the Empire State Building, when it was for sale a few years ago. In 2001, the major US and European pharmaceutical companies invested more than US$ 30 billion in R&D, at a higher R&D­ to-sales ratio than virtually any other industry, including chemicals, auto­ mobiles, electronics, aerospace, and computers. Delivering a blockbuster drug is the Holy Grail for any pharmaceutical company. But in the last decade the rules of developing blockbusters seem to have changed. On the one hand, more sophisticated screening technolo­ gies, genetic engineering, and expanding networks with biotechnology companies increase the probability of commercial success. Critical success factors include the discovery phase and a stronger outside-in orientation in the early innovation phase. After the implosion of the high-tech stock mar­ ket, biotechnology and other technology-driven opportunities may have lost some of their attractiveness for big pharma: a pipeline of solid and predictable innovations seems to be the highest goal of most pharmaceuti­ cal companies again. On the other hand, despite significant investments in pipeline management and novel technologies, there is still no recipe for ensuring a blockbuster hit.

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