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by dv_dt
2444 days ago
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Maybe. There are studies which point out some interesting large scale trends. One that private pharma R&D is getting less efficient, creating fewer and fewer drugs per billion dollars. Another is that many current high profit drugs had their early fundamental breakthrough research as government funded R&D, and that todays gov't funding of drug R&D is at a relative low because private industry is theoretically taking care of it all now. Another observation is that private R&D often focuses far more on the development than the research, developing new drug "packaging and delivery", in part to gain IP extensions, instead of fundamentally new drugs. |
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1.) The easy targets are mostly gone. All the biology we understand very well either has drugs already, or for some key reason can't be addressed with the drug discovery system we have today (see KRAS, though there are glimmers of home there). This means we have to go after harder diseases that aren't as well understood or have complex etiology. Necessarily that's less efficient.
2.) When you drug something, it eventually becomes incredibly cheap to use that drug, and it becomes the benchmark. (AKA the "better than the Beatles problem") As a pharma company you're competing against the former, better (because you were going after easier biology) versions of yourself all the time. This is also true in software, good software often becomes somewhat commoditized. However, in software we've had exponentially increasing compute capacity for some time, which means the next product can be exponentially better than the previous one simply because new things become actually possible to do when they weren't before. This by and large isn't and can't be true in pharma.