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Big Pharma's stalled R&D machine
reuters ^ | 6/16/10 | Ben Hirschler and Kate Kelland

Posted on 06/16/2010 12:20:08 PM PDT by Nachum

* No more new drugs today than 60 years ago

* Diversification push as blockbusters stumble

* 200,000 jobs could go across the industry

* Can biotech and contract research pick up the pieces?

LONDON, June 16 (Reuters) - At just 28, Duncan Casey has already been from the university science bench to the world of Big Pharma research and back again. Now working in an Imperial College lab tucked behind London's famous Science Museum, he has no illusions about the prospects for researchers in the pharmaceutical industry.

"The unit I used to work in -- GlaxoSmithKline's place in Harlow -- has been closed down now," says Casey, dressed in signature protective goggles and white coat as he works on synthetic chemistry. "It used to be a job for life. Now it's a job until the next restructuring."

(Excerpt) Read more at reuters.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: big; pharmas; rd; stalled
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To: Centurion2000
ISU cites AACSB International (The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business) as their accreditation. The University of Phoenix cites Association of Collegiate Business Schools and Programs as their accreditation. University of Dallas shares the ACBSP choice with University of Phoenix.

The reason I'm familiar with the issue is that my son graduated with a BS in Business Administration from University of Phoenix. He is eligible for a reduced cost for his MBA classes at UoP. After some investigation into job opportunities for persons with an MBA, the accreditation issue came up. He discovered UoP didn't have the preferred accreditation. Now that he is an Idaho resident, he has the option to pursue the MBA in town at ISU. His real estate business is doing well, so he should be able to salt away enough to cover the MBA before jumping into the program.

21 posted on 06/16/2010 1:27:23 PM PDT by Myrddin
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To: Nachum

This is the big down side to taking money from medicine. When it isn’t profitable to develope new drugs and ways to treat illnesses they no longer are pursued. We now will be forever stuck with the same treatments we’ve had except if they are too expensive. Pray no one you know comes down with anything too expensive to treat.


22 posted on 06/16/2010 1:37:36 PM PDT by chris_bdba
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To: Lance Romance
UGA-Terry College of Business cites AACSB accreditation.

When I was in grad school, I had a look around at folks doing what I was pursuing. The academics spent time teaching classes, publishing papers and chasing grants. The industrial employees weren't compensated much better. I can apply my EE/CS skills to problems with sufficient scale to actually repay the cost of the effort many fold. It's enjoyable and there is always another problem lurking to solve.

23 posted on 06/16/2010 1:37:36 PM PDT by Myrddin
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To: arthurus
I am not enraged by the prices.Without those prices there would not be those drugs. We pay the stratospheric prices for NEW drugs because the rest of the world will not pay for the R&D.

Hence the low prices of these same drugs in other countries, and the rise of internet pharmacies. And when patents expire, it's a free-for-all.

24 posted on 06/16/2010 2:17:23 PM PDT by Gorzaloon (CNN:AP:etc:Today, President Obama's stool was firm and well-formed. One end was slightly pointed. ")
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To: Gorzaloon

Free-for-all as in Free Market.Without the stratospheric prices for new drugs that recover the R&D expenses for Big Pharma there would be no new drugs. So instead of having to wait out the Patent period the to get the new drugs for the rare diseases there would simply be no new drugs at all and those rare diseases would never become curable. The inability to understand that there is a future- the Right Now or not at all attitude is compatible with Obamacare and will kill R&D and cut off development of new cures not to mention bring to an end the development of new antibiotics to replace the extant ones that are declining in usefulness as the pathogens mutate immunities. Can you imagine a world without effective antibiotics? Your children will see it and maybe you will if you are young.


25 posted on 06/16/2010 3:15:29 PM PDT by arthurus ("If you don't believe in shooting abortionists, don't shoot an abortionist." -Ann C.)
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To: dfwgator
A lot of “basic” research is done through NHIC grants awarded to what looks like promising research at our American universities (increasing their prestige, producing quality graduates, etc).

But just because somebody with an NHIC grant figured out that stimulating/blocking a particular receptor MIGHT have a therapeutic effect is a LONG LONG LONG (and expensive) ways away from designing a drug that will do so that has good drug properties, no or low side effects, etc.

If you think pharma companies just take NHIC research and market it as their own; then drug discovery would be so easy that EVERYBODY would be doing it.

Your characterization of them as marketing companies might be true of some of the “giants”, but they get new drugs not from some privileged NHIC pipeline, but from purchasing smaller pharma companies that look to have “hit gold”.

Drug research is a lot like mining for gold. Lots of austerity and hard work before you ever see even a gleam of ‘color’, and striking a ‘mother load’ is a rare event.

26 posted on 06/16/2010 3:25:32 PM PDT by allmendream (Income is EARNED not distributed. So how could it be re-distributed?)
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To: arthurus
Can you imagine a world without effective antibiotics? Your children will see it and maybe you will if you are young.

I heard about such a world from my grandparents. Children died like flies.

I am old enough so I probably will not see it, and that's fine with me.

People nostalgic for the Gay '90's, the Titanic Era, the Roaring '20's, etc, forget that there was no penicillin till 1928. Cut yourself, step on a dirty nail, give birth, and commonly die.

27 posted on 06/16/2010 3:50:36 PM PDT by Gorzaloon (CNN:AP:etc:Today, President Obama's stool was firm and well-formed. One end was slightly pointed. ")
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To: Nachum

I have no doubt that we could solve cancer, but where is the payoff, where is the money to be spent doing it? The government takes, and takes, and takes, while people die from things we could invent the technology to cure.


28 posted on 06/16/2010 3:54:14 PM PDT by CodeToad
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To: CodeToad
How do you stop DNA from mutating?

While more effective treatments for cancer have and will continue to be developed (and there is plenty of payoff in that, both for the customer in terms of longer and better life, and the company selling the treatment), we are a long ways away from any sort of solution that would “solve” the problem of cancer.

DNA mutates. It is a fact of life. Life itself is a mutagenic process. Some mutations are going to cause cancer. It is as simple as that.

29 posted on 06/16/2010 4:01:19 PM PDT by allmendream (Income is EARNED not distributed. So how could it be re-distributed?)
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To: allmendream

“How do you stop DNA from mutating?”

Who says that is the solution?


30 posted on 06/16/2010 4:11:18 PM PDT by CodeToad
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To: CodeToad
Cancer is caused by DNA mutation.

The only way to “solve” cancer would be to stop DNA from mutating and that is impossible.

The only way to “treat” cancer is to kill the mutated cells.

The problem is that almost anything that is toxic to a cancer cell will also be toxic to your unmutated cells.

Thus the quest for the “magic bullet” that will kill only cancer cells.

We have made great strides in treating cancer, but the only way to not get cancer in the first place is to ensure that your DNA doesn't mutate.

DNA always mutates.

31 posted on 06/16/2010 4:21:56 PM PDT by allmendream (Income is EARNED not distributed. So how could it be re-distributed?)
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To: Gorzaloon
I heard about such a world from my grandparents. Children died like flies.

I have been pounding this nail for so long as socialized medicine has been a real possibility in America and you are the first other person to show any understanding of or concern for it at all. To me it is the primary issue in Socialied Medicine for the Last medical free market. No one else seems able to conceive of it being any problem at all, even on FR.

32 posted on 06/16/2010 5:07:44 PM PDT by arthurus ("If you don't believe in shooting abortionists, don't shoot an abortionist." -Ann C.)
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To: arthurus
No one else seems able to conceive of it being any problem at all, even on FR.

The return of Plagues is the Unthinkable, almost literally. It seems like the Stone Age.

Add to that, 10% are unemployed and 16% underemployed, we had a fascist coupe d'etat, and people are concerned about having to live like beasts and grub for roots and berries after being looted and plundered, so it is no wonder no one wants to think beyond a fifteen-year horizon.

Depopulation by plagues, added to the intended euthanasia of oxygen wasters like me, and Politbureau-furnished abortion will delight the Gaea Crowd, as we return to a pristine Pleistocene, without evil SUV's and a teeming mass of humanity to annoy the Great Mother.

33 posted on 06/16/2010 5:18:28 PM PDT by Gorzaloon (CNN:AP:etc:Today, President Obama's stool was firm and well-formed. One end was slightly pointed. ")
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