DRUG COMPANY PIPELINES ARE FAILING (Posted 2005-10-12 13:43:54 by Ray Lopez) It now appears that all of the money, over the last 10 years or so, that pharmaceutical companies have spent on new drug research and development have not really paid off. From a 20 September Reuters news story entitled "US medical research spending rises, results lag," it appears that even though spending on medical research doubled over the past decade to $94 billion in 2003, the results have been disappointing. I think it likely that spending has doubled because of the increased emphasis on pure genomic and proteomic research. Such research is expensive, requiring everything from expensive equipment to manipulate and assay genes and proteins on a large scale, to heavy duty IT infrastructures to sort through and analyze the massive amounts of data produced by such research. The payoff for this type of spending may come further down the line, as pharma researchers get better and better at analyzing their data and focusing on promising areas. The key consideration here is that the payoff "may" happen. It is not clear that it will. There are other meta-factors that probably need to be dealt with before it can be said with certainty that medical research will advance in some fashion other than fits and starts. I think the biggest of these factors has to do with the researchers themselves. Most of the big research organizations in the pharma industry have gotten away from the pseudo-academic, investigator-centric approach. It used to be that investigators were more free to pursue what they wanted to in their own labs. Research agendas were not micro-managed, such that an individual investigator could choose however he or she wanted to research within a particular area. The problem now is that most researchers (particularly young ones) are no longer free to investigate what they want and how they want to. Because of the research model used for breaking down proteomics and genomics into smaller chunks, most investigators are forced into working in an environment where they have their work and problems defined for them. This is a sure way to kill innovation. By not allowing researchers a way to pursue solutions the way in which they like, most big pharmas are effectively stifling the most important part of their drug discovery pipeline: The innovation that results from asking new questions, from looking at things in a different way, from mixing people and their ideas together and generating new ideas. -------- There are no comments on this post. To submit a comment on this post, email rl@well.com or visit us on the web [ http://ratthing.com ]. .