Public sector replacement of privately funded pharmaceutical R&D: cost and efficiency considerations

被引:0
|
作者
Proudman, David [1 ]
Desai, Urvi [1 ]
Gomes, Dumingu Aparna [1 ]
Khomenko, Maks [1 ]
Martin, Silas [2 ]
Nellesen, Dave [1 ]
Neumann, Ulrich [2 ]
Grabowski, Henry [3 ]
机构
[1] Anal Grp Inc, 111 Huntington Ave,14th floor, Boston, MA 02199 USA
[2] Johnson & Johnson Innovat Med, Sci Affairs, Titusville, NJ USA
[3] Duke Univ, Dept Econ, Durham, NC USA
关键词
Pharmaceutical R&D; complementarity; NIH; public R&D; pharmaceutical policy; R&D policy; C54; C5; C; E61; E6; E; H51; H5; H; I1; I; UNITED-STATES; INNOVATION; DRUG; INCENTIVES; COMMITMENT; INVESTMENT; CONTRACTS; HEALTH; MARKET;
D O I
10.1080/13696998.2024.2405407
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Aims: Economic studies have found that public support of basic medical research provides important long-term benefits. In response to suggestions that private pharmaceutical research and development (R&D) funding could be totally replaced by public funding, we investigate the economic implications of such a substitution in funding roles that maintain the recent pace of pharmaceutical innovation. Materials and methods: Total lifecycle R&D costs were estimated using the latest available R&D expenditures per novel molecule entering clinical trials, likelihood of approval, pre-clinical and post-approval expenditures, using a published survey and a review of publicly available financial accounts from US-listed multinational developers. This estimate was then stratified by the average number of annual FDA approvals to estimate total costs of R&D funding born by the private sector. Results: We find total lifecycle R&D costs were US$2.83 billion per approved medicine. Estimated uncapitalized costs to replace private R&D funding for one year of FDA approvals were $139.6 billion. These additional costs are equivalent to 302% of the entire National Institute for Health 2022 budget of $46.2 billion, and around 25 times NIH's estimated annual $5.6 billion currently dedicated to clinical research trials for pharmaceuticals. Further assessing the policy proposition through a literature review, we found little evidence for improvements in economic efficiency via public funding substitution, while there may be additional challenges including asymmetric information, adverse selection, yardstick competition, hold-up, under-rewarding of incremental innovation and political rent-seeking. LimitationsOur calculations may undervalue full replacement costs, by excluding non-R&D expenses for manufacturing, distribution, or financing. Conclusions: The bulk of investment in R&D is underwritten by the private sector. Political discourse portraying the NIH as the central force in bringing a new drug to market may underappreciate the pivotal role of private at-risk capital. Replacing such investment while maintaining the current innovation output in terms of approved therapies would necessitate substantial increases in taxpayer financing.
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页码:1253 / 1266
页数:14
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