IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science Study: Record 59 New U.S. Drugs Launched in 2018, Success Rates Fall, R&D Trends Could...
April 23 2019 - 8:00AM
Business Wire
- A third of the new drugs identified as
innovative therapies with novel mechanisms of action different from
existing therapies
- The likelihood that a drug entering
clinical development would be a success was 11 percent, down from
14 percent in 2017
- Eight identified trends could increase
R&D productivity by double digits during next five years
Ongoing changes in the clinical development process led to a
record number of drug approvals in 2018, with 59 novel treatments
reaching patients in the United States alone. During the next five
years, trial productivity will be heavily influenced by key trends,
including wider use of biomarkers, pre-screened patient pools,
regulatory shifts and application of artificial intelligence and
predictive analytics.
To examine historical and future clinical trial productivity
trends across therapy areas a new report from the IQVIA Institute
for Human Data science titled, The Changing Landscape of Research
and Development: Innovation, Drivers of Change, and Evolution of
Clinical Trial Productivity puts forth a proprietary Clinical
Development Productivity Index that reflects changes in trial
complexity, success and duration.
Using this index, the report takes a 10-year historical view of
these metrics and recasts the data with a future perspective that
identifies critical productivity changes expected through 2023.
IQVIA experts shed light on those productivity shifts using the
proprietary IQVIA Clinical Development Trends Impact Assessment,
identifying the quantitative impact of the eight key trends driving
change in clinical development at a therapy-area level. Those
drivers are:
- Digital health technologies to
enable the capture of drug efficacy and safety data remotely, which
can improve patient safety, enable virtual trial formats and ease
site work burden.
- Patient-reported outcomes that
will shed new light on patient experience and drug efficacy and
safety outside the clinical setting and lead to accelerated trial
times as endpoints shift.
- Real-world data to optimize
trial design, speed investigator and site selection, and enable new
trial designs by acting as virtual control arms and supporting
pragmatic, adaptive and RWE registry trials.
- Predictive analytics and artificial
intelligence to identify new clinical hypotheses, reduce trial
design risks and speed enrollment by identifying protocol-ready
patients.
- Shifts in types of drugs tested,
for instance, to targeted therapies and next-generation
biotherapeutics that improve efficacy and success rates and have
accelerated development timelines but require longer-term patient
follow-up.
- Biomarker testing availability
to help narrow patient populations to those more likely to see
effect, resulting in improvements in efficacy, safety and
success.
- Regulatory landscape changes
that will encourage the adoption of precision medicine approaches,
novel trial designs and endpoints while providing means for
accelerated drug approvals and regulatory success.
- Pools of pre-screened patients
and direct-to-patient recruitment, which will facilitate enhanced
trial enrollment, shortened trial duration and faster market
availability.
“As advances in science, technology and data gradually find
application within clinical development, the length of time that
trials take to complete, the resources required due to trial
complexity and likelihood of trial success are all shifting, with
impacts varying by therapy area,” said Murray Aitken, IQVIA senior
vice president and executive director of the IQVIA Institute for
Human Data Science. “Our study assesses the current activity within
research and development, the productivity levels of the clinical
development process and how key trial trends will transform
clinical development over the next five years.”
Additional highlights in the report include:
- Emerging biopharma companies account
for 72 percent of all late-stage pipeline activity, up from 61
percent a decade ago. Large pharma companies with more than $10
billion in annual pharmaceutical sales have seen their R&D
share drop from 31 percent to 20 percent during the same period.
This pipeline mix reflects smaller companies being most active in
the fastest growing areas of oncology and orphan drugs, and their
diminishing need for partnering or acquisition to develop and
commercialize their innovative medicines.
- Investment in medical innovation
grew in 2018, reflecting confidence in scientific development
to propel new treatments to tackle unmet health needs across a
broad range of diseases. In 2018, more than 1,300 life science
venture capital deals were closed with an aggregate value of more
than $23 billion, up from roughly $10 billion in deal value five
years earlier, according to the National Venture Capital
Association.
- Developing innovative medicines
continues to be a slow process with the 2018 cohort taking a
median of 13.7 years from the time of first patent filing to
product launch, almost six months faster than the median of the
past five years. Of the 2018 new drug launches, four new molecular
entities launched in less than eight years, while another 12 drugs
launched more than 20 years after their first patent filing,
reflecting in some cases older mechanisms of action and the
approval of drugs that had launched in countries outside the
U.S.
- Dramatic R&D successes and
failures occurred in 2018. Within chronic liver disease
research, nine new drugs were added to the late-stage pipeline in
2018 as drugs with several mechanisms continue to show promise
within that therapeutic area. However, within the Alzheimer’s
category, four drugs failed in development, bringing the total
number of failures to 85 during the past 10 years even as unmet
needs remain significant and potential healthcare cost impacts loom
over future generations.
None of the analytics in this report are derived from
proprietary sponsor trial information but are instead based on
proprietary IQVIA databases and/or third-party information. The
full version of the report, including a detailed description of the
methodology, is available at www.IQVIAInstitute.org. The study was
produced independently as a public service without industry or
government funding.
About the IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science
The IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science contributes to the
advancement of human health globally through timely research,
insightful analysis and scientific expertise applied to granular
non-identified patient-level data.
Fulfilling an essential need within healthcare, the Institute
delivers objective, relevant insights and research that accelerate
understanding and innovation critical to sound decision making and
improved human outcomes. With access to IQVIA’s institutional
knowledge, advanced analytics, technology and unparalleled data,
the Institute works in tandem with a broad set of healthcare
stakeholders to drive a research agenda focused on Human Data
Science, including government agencies, academic institutions, the
life sciences industry and payers. More information about the IQVIA
Institute can be found at www.IQVIAInstitute.org.
About IQVIA
IQVIA (NYSE:IQV) is a leading global provider of advanced
analytics, technology solutions and contract research services to
the life sciences industry. Formed through the merger of IMS Health
and Quintiles, IQVIA applies human data science — leveraging the
analytic rigor and clarity of data science to the ever-expanding
scope of human science — to enable companies to reimagine and
develop new approaches to clinical development and
commercialization, speed innovation and accelerate improvements in
healthcare outcomes. Powered by the IQVIA CORE™, IQVIA delivers
unique and actionable insights at the intersection of large-scale
analytics, transformative technology and extensive domain
expertise, as well as execution capabilities. With more than 58,000
employees, IQVIA conducts operations in more than 100
countries.
IQVIA is a global leader in protecting individual patient
privacy. The company uses a wide variety of privacy-enhancing
technologies and safeguards to protect individual privacy while
generating and analyzing information on a scale that helps
healthcare stakeholders identify disease patterns and correlate
with the precise treatment path and therapy needed for better
outcomes. IQVIA’s insights and execution capabilities help biotech,
medical device and pharmaceutical companies, medical researchers,
government agencies, payers and other healthcare stakeholders tap
into a deeper understanding of diseases, human behaviors and
scientific advances, in an effort to advance their path toward
cures. To learn more, visit www.iqvia.com.
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Andrew Markwick, IQVIA Investor Relations
(andrew.markwick@iqvia.com)+1.973.257.7144
Tor Constantino, IQVIA Media Relations
(tor.constantino@iqvia.com)+1.484.567.6732
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