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Risk in vaccine research and development quantified. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Vaccination is the most effective way to fight infectious diseases, but the pharmaceutical industry faces a productivity gap where investment does not meet expected outcomes.
  • A study compiled data on vaccine projects from 1998 to 2009, finding that vaccines typically take around 10.71 years to develop, with a market entry probability of only 6%.
  • Pandemic influenza vaccines seem more lucrative, and there are notable differences in risk profiles: vaccines for acute diseases are lower risk compared to those for chronic diseases, with further research needed on cancer and other specialized vaccines.

Article Abstract

To date, vaccination is the most cost-effective strategy to combat infectious diseases. Recently, a productivity gap affects the pharmaceutical industry. The productivity gap describes the situation whereby the invested resources within an industry do not match the expected product turn-over. While risk profiles (combining research and development timelines and transition rates) have been published for new chemical entities (NCE), little is documented on vaccine development. The objective is to calculate risk profiles for vaccines targeting human infectious diseases. A database was actively compiled to include all vaccine projects in development from 1998 to 2009 in the pre-clinical development phase, clinical trials phase I, II and III up to Market Registration. The average vaccine, taken from the preclinical phase, requires a development timeline of 10.71 years and has a market entry probability of 6%. Stratification by disease area reveals pandemic influenza vaccine targets as lucrative. Furthermore, vaccines targeting acute infectious diseases and prophylactic vaccines have shown to have a lower risk profile when compared to vaccines targeting chronic infections and therapeutic applications. In conclusion; these statistics apply to vaccines targeting human infectious diseases. Vaccines targeting cancer, allergy and autoimmune diseases require further analysis. Additionally, this paper does not address orphan vaccines targeting unmet medical needs, whether projects are in-licensed or self-originated and firm size and experience. Therefore, it remains to be investigated how these - and other - variables influence the vaccine risk profile. Although we find huge differences between the risk profiles for vaccine and NCE; vaccines outperform NCE when it comes to development timelines.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3603987PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0057755PLOS

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