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Τρίτη 15 Οκτωβρίου 2013

The top Phase III R&D setbacks of 2013




Πηγή: Fierce Biotech | John Carroll


The stats on Phase III success rates aren't good. About half end in failure--and that's after developers have had a chance to do some careful testing in humans. It's no wonder, then, that late-stage failures continue to inflict some punishing damage on the world's largest R&D organizations--which in most cases are still laboring to overcome the arrival of the patent cliff.

I've singled out what I consider the most significant Phase III setbacks of the year (so far). They were selected not just because they damaged or destroyed estimates on peak sales, but because they also reflected on the companies involved, influenced their research strategies or raised questions about a disease initiative that had grabbed the attention of everyone in the field.

It doesn't always seem possible, but failure doesn't have to be solely negative. The best organizations learn from their high-profile failures and the setbacks of others. What's amazing is how often failure is still immediately shoved out of public view, and how easy it is to convince analysts it was either really a success or completely unimportant. The wake-up call on R&D came long ago, but some groups are still fast asleep.





Sanofi, Teva face renewed backlash as job cuts hit home countries



Πηγή: FiercePharma | Tracy Staton

Two drug company reorganizations. Two goals in mind. One common obstacle. As Teva Pharmaceutical Industries copes with the Israeli backlash from last week's layoff announcement, Sanofi continues to feel the heat from French leaders on its own R&D restructuring scheme.
The situation Teva  now faces is eerily similar to Sanofi's  experience in France last year. Immediately after learning that job cuts would hit Teva's home country, Israel, local labor leaders vowed to strike. By this morning, government officials had jumped into the game. Reportedly, Israeli Finance Minister Yair Lapid and labor leaders "see eye to eye" on the need to protect Teva's employees. And State Comptroller Joseph Shapira called Teva's layoff plans "out of place."