PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

How do data exclusivity periods affect pharmaceutical innovation?

Study is first to estimate financial and social impact of extending exclusive access to clinical trial data for conventional drugs

2011-01-07
(Press-News.org) LOS ANGELES, Calif. — January 6, 2011 — Pharmaceutical companies and generic drug manufacturers have long been at odds over regulations about "data exclusivity," the period of time before generic manufacturers can make use of valuable clinical trial data.

A new study in the January 2011 issue of Health Affairs is the first to calculate the financial and social costs of limiting access to trial data — and finds that extending the term of exclusive access will lead to higher drug costs in the short term but also to more than 200 extra drug approvals and to greater life expectancy in the next several decades.

"Elected officials are unlikely to embrace legislation that would result in higher drug prices, but our research suggests that legislation to extend data exclusivity would spur innovation that would benefit future generations," explained Dana Goldman, lead author, director of the Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics at USC and Norman Topping Chair in Medicine and Public Policy at USC.

The pharmaceutical companies that introduce new drugs are currently granted five years of exclusive access to the clinical trial data they submit during the approval process. An extension of three years is available if new applications arise and a six month extension is granted if the drug is approved for use in pediatric populations.

In 2007, the National Academies Committee on Science, Engineering and Public Policy called for extending this "data exclusivity" term to the longer period used in Europe, ten to 11 years. But generic manufacturers have argued for shorter limits so that they can bring less expensive versions of drugs to patients sooner.

"Unfortunately, the health policy literature contains no information about the effects such a policy would have on innovation, population longevity and social welfare," said Darius Lakdawalla, research director at the Schaeffer Center at USC and associate professor in the USC School of Policy, Planning and Development.

In the first study to directly address these issues, the researchers estimate that extending the term of data exclusivity to 12 years would increase the lifetime revenue of a drug by 5 percent, on average.

With empirical evidence that profits drive drug innovation, this longer term would lead to an additional 228 drug approvals over the next fifty years and an increase of 1.7 months in average life expectancy, according to the study.

John Romley, an economist with the Schaeffer Center at USC and research assistant professor at the USC School of Policy, Planning and Development, acknowledged the trade-off between current and future generations: "Americans in the early 2020's would bear the cost of increasing drug spending. However, people turning 55 in 2060 could expect increased life expectancy as a result of innovation in the interceding years — that is, new drugs brought to market because of lengthier data exclusivity."

INFORMATION: Jesse D. Malkin at Precision Health Economics and Tomas Philipson of the University of Chicago are also authors on the study. The research was sponsored by the National Institute on Aging through its support of the Roybal Center for Health Policy Simulation and INTERPAT, an association of research-based pharmaceutical companies.

Goldman et al., "The Benefits from Giving Makers of Conventional 'Small Molecule' Drugs Longer Exclusivity Over Clinical Trial Data." Health Affairs: January 2011.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Longstanding mystery of Sun's hot outer atmosphere solved

Longstanding mystery of Suns hot outer atmosphere solved
2011-01-07
One of the most enduring mysteries in solar physics is why the Sun's outer atmosphere, or corona, is millions of degrees hotter than its surface. Now scientists believe they have discovered a major source of hot gas that replenishes the corona: jets of plasma shooting up from just above the Sun's surface. The finding addresses a fundamental question in astrophysics: how energy is moved from the Sun's interior to create its hot outer atmosphere. "It's always been quite a puzzle to figure out why the Sun's atmosphere is hotter than its surface," says Scott McIntosh, ...

Biofuel grasslands better for birds than ethanol staple corn, researchers find

Biofuel grasslands better for birds than ethanol staple corn, researchers find
2011-01-07
EAST LANSING, Mich. — Developing biofuel from native perennials instead of corn in the Midwest's rolling grasslands would better protect threatened bird populations, Michigan State University research suggests. Federal mandates and market forces both are expected to promote rising biofuel production, MSU biologist Bruce Robertson says, but the environmental consequences of turning more acreage over to row crops for fuel are a serious concern. Ethanol in America is chiefly made from corn, but research is focusing on how to cost-effectively process cellulosic sources ...

Story tips from the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory January 2011

2011-01-07
FORENSICS -- The telltale bone Technology developed more than 100 years ago to wirelessly transmit electricity is being adapted to locate clandestine graves. Oak Ridge National Laboratory's Charles Van Neste and colleagues are transmitting electromagnetic waves to penetrate the ground and set up a resonance in buried bones. "The system consists of a transmitter and a receiver that collects the surface waves and passively integrates them through resonance over time," Van Neste said. He and colleagues Arpad Vass, Marc Wise and Lee Hively have discovered that human bone ...

Sulphur proves important in the formation of gold mines

2011-01-07
Collaborating with an international research team, an economic geologist from The University of Western Ontario has discovered how gold-rich magma is produced, unveiling an all-important step in the formation of gold mines. The findings were published in the December issue of Nature Geoscience. Robert Linnen, the Robert Hodder Chair in Economic Geology in Western's Department of Earth Sciences conducts research near Kirkland Lake, Ontario and says the results of the study could lead to a breakthrough in choosing geographic targets for gold exploration and making exploration ...

CMU research finds regional dialects are alive and well on Twitter

2011-01-07
PITTSBURGH—Microbloggers may think they're interacting in one big Twitterverse, but researchers at Carnegie Mellon University's School of Computer Science find that regional slang and dialects are as evident in tweets as they are in everyday conversations. Postings on Twitter reflect some well-known regionalisms, such as Southerners' "y'all," and Pittsburghers' "yinz," and the usual regional divides in references to soda, pop and Coke. But Jacob Eisenstein, a post-doctoral fellow in CMU's Machine Learning Department, said the automated method he and his colleagues have ...

Hotspots in fountains on the sun's surface help explain coronal heating mystery

Hotspots in fountains on the suns surface help explain coronal heating mystery
2011-01-07
GREENBELT, Md. -- Observations from NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) and the Japanese satellite Hinode show that some gas in the giant, fountain-like jets in the sun's atmosphere known as spicules can reach temperatures of millions of degrees. The finding offers a possible new framework for how the sun's high atmosphere gets so much hotter than the surface of the sun. What makes the high atmosphere, or corona, so hot – over a million degrees, compared to the sun surface's 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit -- remains a poorly understood aspect of the sun's complicated space ...

Study finds energy limits global economic growth

2011-01-07
A study that relates global energy use to economic growth, published in the January issue of BioScience, finds strong correlations between these two measures both among countries and within countries over time. The research leads the study's authors to infer that energy use limits economic activity directly. They conclude that an "enormous" increase in energy supply will be required to meet the demands of projected world population growth and lift the developing world out of poverty without jeopardizing standards of living in most developed countries. The study, which ...

Evidence lacking for widespread use of costly antipsychotic drugs, says Stanford researcher

2011-01-07
STANFORD, Calif. — Many prescriptions for the top-selling class of drugs, known as atypical antipsychotic medications, lack strong evidence that the drugs will actually help, a study by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine and University of Chicago has found. Yet, drugs in this class may cause such serious effects as weight gain, diabetes and heart disease, and cost Americans billions of dollars. "Because these drugs have safety issues, physicians should prescribe them only when they are sure patients will get substantial benefits," said Randall Stafford, ...

Statistical analysis can estimate crop performance

2011-01-07
Madison, WI December 23, 2010 – Scientists at Rothamsted Research, United Kingdom, in collaboration with the International Center for Agriculture Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA), Syria have developed a method of accounting for spatial trend in single crop field trials. Spatial trend refers to the variations in crop yield and other characteristics observed when repeating this single crop field trial. Usually plant breeders will grow several replicate plots to assess the breed line in different environments and then compare the results to commercial or standard varieties ...

Glaucoma Eye Test Through Eyelid Supports National Glaucoma Awareness Month - BiCOM sets up Free Eye Exam and Glaucoma Educational Events Worldwide

2011-01-07
BiCOM Inc. home of Glaucoma Eye Test Diat throug the eylid supports National Glaucoma Awareness Month this January. It is imperative to get regular eye pressure (IOP) test. Vision loss caused by Glaucoma can be slowed or halted with the proper medication. Getting an eye pressure screening has never been easier or safer with painless, hand-held through the eyelid Tonometer Diaton aka Glaucoma Eye Test. The start of a new year signifies a new beginning to most, many people making resolutions to better their lives. Improving health is usually a top priority - but, visual ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

AI model can reveal the structures of crystalline materials

MD Anderson Research Highlights for September 19, 2024

The role of artificial intelligence in advancing intratumoral immunotherapy

Political ideology is associated with differences in brain structure, but less than previously thought

Genetic tracing at the Huanan Seafood market further supports COVID animal origins

Breastfeeding is crucial to shaping infant’s microbes and promoting lung health

Scientists at the CNIC discover an unexpected involvement of sodium transport in mitochondrial energy generation

Origami paper sensors could help early detection of infectious diseases in new simple, low-cost test

Safety of the seasonal influenza vaccine in 2 successive pregnancies

Preconception and early-pregnancy BMI in women and men, time to pregnancy, and risk of miscarriage

Samples from Huanan Seafood Market provide further evidence of COVID-19 animal origins

City of Hope vaccine experts report positive results on Phase 1 trial of personalized vaccine for lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma

Global assessment: How to make climate adaptation a success

The African Engineering and Technology Network signs eighth university partner

Researchers awarded $1.14M to use artificial intelligence to determine best rectal cancer treatment strategy

A new ventilator-on-a-chip model to study lung damage

Enrollment of undocumented students at California universities dropped from 2016 to 2023

Gaining insights into the chemical basis of aversive learning

Revolutionary visible-light-antenna ligand enhances samarium-catalyzed reactions

Stopping plants from passing viruses to their progeny

​​​​​​​NIH awards $2.8M to Rice, Baylor College of Medicine for research on acute respiratory distress syndrome

The University of Limpopo chooses Figshare to support its research excellence strategy

A new forecasting model based on gene activity predicts when Japan’s cherry buds awake from dormancy

New organic thermoelectric device that can harvest energy at room temperature

Activity in brain system that controls eye movements highlights importance of spatial thinking

New research reenvisions Earth’s mantle as a relatively uniform reservoir

Global warming leads to drier and hotter Amazon: reducing uncertainty in future rainforest carbon loss

Low-carbon ammonia offers green alternative for agriculture and hydrogen transport

New mechanism uncovered for the reduction of emu wings

Zeroing in on the genes that snakes use to produce venom

[Press-News.org] How do data exclusivity periods affect pharmaceutical innovation?
Study is first to estimate financial and social impact of extending exclusive access to clinical trial data for conventional drugs