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Pharmaceutical
and Biotechnology Companies Adopt Outsourcing Practices to Combat Rising
Costs
LONDON
, November 23/PRNewswire/ --
Specialised Outsourcing Partners to Facilitate Drug Discovery Process
Lengthy drug discovery times and the soaring costs of drug development
- currently estimated at approximately
US$800 million - are putting pharmaceutical
and biotechnology firms under immense pressure. Intensifying the
financial strain are increasingly complex clinical trial requirements
and high drug failure rates with only
15 per cent of new drugs entering development
expected to reach the market. To control rising costs and generate
new breakthroughs, therefore, companies are looking to outsource their
drug discovery processes.
"Outsourcing may be one
strategy to adopt, which allows companies to control
and utilise their R&D expenditure more effectively," says Dr.
Amarpreet Dhiman, Research Analyst at Frost
& Sullivan (http://healthcare.frost.com).
"Also, despite cost efficiency being a contributing
factor to encourage outsourcing, the impact of genomics and proteomics
in therapeutics has also resulted in an increasing awareness of the
benefits of outsourcing."
As a result, pharma companies are increasingly eager to form alliances
with biotechnology firms, university
research centres, contract research organisations
(CROs), specialised niche vendors and general service providers.
Such partnerships are facilitating the drug discovery process. For
instance, CROs provide expert geographic
coverage enabling companies to allow clinicians
of different locations to simultaneously view and discuss data, resulting
in improved testing and turn-around times, and ultimately enhanced
data quality.
"Outsourcing can complement the in-house level of expertise and
experience, giving access to technological
innovations, thus leading to reduced
complexities within R&D, providing rapid access to greater R&D
resources, therapeutic expertise, and bring
about alignment with diagnostic testing
for safer and more effective therapies," remarks Dr. Dhiman.
"This represents an important
driver in addition to improvements in efficiency, cost
and speed by removing conventional habits and processes."
Consequently, the scope of outsourcing has expanded with the trend to
outsource processes such as
finance/accounting, clinical trial data management,
drug manufacturing, logistics and human resources and parts of IT
gaining momentum. Accordingly, the European
drug discovery outsourcing market is
forecast to expand from $3.2 billion in 2004 to 5.1 billion by 2011.
Companies who outsource their operations should, however, ensure that
they retain control over their business
processes and proprietary knowledge. "At
the same time, companies must become more comfortable about sharing some
control over non-core processes, with the
risk of errors and delays, with their
ability to safeguard proprietary knowledge, and with the impact of
outsourcing on regulatory compliance,"
says Dr. Dhiman. "It is important that the
various risks are identified, understood and measured, so that companies
can successfully pool their disciplines to
their development partners."
Hence, firms are likely to select outsourcing partners with an established
track record, which possess capabilities to meet varied scientific
and operational requirements. Also, companies seeking to combat high
costs can benefit greatly by selecting an outsourcing partner from
lower-wage countries such as
India
and
China
.
By 2010, more than 40 per cent of R&D is projected to be outsourced
to more specialised firms in order to
efficiently maintain a strong and vital pipeline
for new blockbuster drugs. As the European drug discovery outsourcing
market expands, firms which are able to reach out to focussed, research-orientated
speciality companies that complement their traditional processes,
are poised to emerge as leaders.
(24/11/05)
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