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www.diahome.org Disclaimer The views and opinions expressed in the following PowerPoint slides are those of the individual presenter and should not be attributed to Drug Information Association, Inc. (“DIA”), its directors, officers, employees, volunteers, members, chapters, councils, Special Interest Area Communities or affiliates, or any organization with which the presenter is employed or affiliated. These PowerPoint slides are the intellectual property of the individual presenter and are protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America and other countries. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Drug Information Association, DIA and DIA logo are registered trademarks or trademarks of Drug Information Association Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. www.diahome.org Global Pharma Market: Performance and Outlook to 2013 Paul Crotty General Manager, IMS Health Canada www.diahome.org Agenda • • • • Global Trends US Trends Canadian Trends Harbingers of Change www.diahome.org Yesterday’s Model Will Not Deliver Tomorrow’s Growth • The availability of good low-cost alternatives for most common conditions combined with increasing payer control of prescribing drives irreversible change • R&D pipeline will not replace sales lost to generics - new products are fewer and smaller • Growth lies in new areas: specialist-driven therapies and emerging markets • Even in these areas, companies need to change their approach: – Earlier preparation for launch to gain payer acceptance and physician adoption – Realignment of commercial models – Leverage emerging markets to drive growth – Re-think R&D Surprisingly good performance in 2009 does nothing to alleviate the need for significant change Source: IMS Health Consulting 2009 www.diahome.org Dependency on Specialty Products Declines as Primary Care Recovers % CONTRIBUTION TO GROWTH 5.4 Global Market Biologics 7.5 23% 10.5 Oncologics 7.3 Specialist-driven 55% 14.2 Emerging Markets (1) 13% 45% 8.5 Generics 0 5 10 % GROWTH CONSTANT US$ Source: IMS Health. MIDAS. MAT June 2009; (1) Market Segmentation 8 markets only www.diahome.org 31% 15 20 25 to 30 NCE Launches Expected in 2009 60 43 45 44 43 41 40 37 37 28 30 30 30 29 25 Source: IMS Health. R&D Focus; Market Insights. June 2009 www.diahome.org 20 09 (f ) 20 08 20 07 20 06 25 20 05 20 04 20 02 20 01 20 00 19 99 19 95 0 19 98 10 34 Potential notable 2009 launches: •Effient (Daiichi Sankyo antiplatelet agent) •Menveo (Novartis meningococcal vaccine) •Simponi (Centocor anti-TNF) •Stelara (J&J anti-psoriasis MAb) •Victoza (Novo Nordisk GLP-1 analogue) 19 97 20 34 20 03 50 49 19 96 NUMBER OF NCE LAUNCHES 2009 YTD: 13 Global NCE launches 1998-2008 45 NUMBER OF NCE LAUNCHES 40 35 21 25 30 22 17 7 23 25 13 19 14 14 20 12 15 10 23 18 19 23 20 14 5 21 15 14 15 7 13 6 0 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 Specialist-driven 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Primary Care-driven Source: IMS Health. Market Insights Team Analysis. June 2009 www.diahome.org 2008 2009 YTD Global Outlook Through 2013 – Continuing Challenges for Most Major Markets • US new products will not fill the trough from the patent cliff despite more positive recent signs • Cost containment continues as a priority in major EU markets though access begins to open for innovative therapies, sometimes with risk-sharing agreements • South Korea, Turkey and Russia respond to budget pressure with significant reforms - outlook remains strong • Japan looking at pricing system overhaul - major implications for market performance and innovation …Global growth 4% to 7% www.diahome.org Agenda • • • • Global Trends US Trends Canadian Trends Harbingers of Change www.diahome.org FDA Approvals Have Generally Slowed And most are specialist-driven and niche therapies New Molecular Entities 40 Therapeutic Biologics 35 30 2009 YTD: 18 21 25 20 15 2009 YTD: 5 10 5 5 0 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Source: IMS R&D Focus. FDA. September 2009 www.diahome.org 2005 2006 2007 2008 FDA approvals in 2008 are skewed towards specialist driven and niche therapies NUMBER OF NCE LAUNCHES 50 45 40 41 37 35 30 16 15 36 33 32 11 25 15 20 24 14 9 22 25 22 17 20 5 6 21 26 23 13 15 10 30 18 12 11 9 6 22 14 7 23 19 11 12 2006 2007 14 0 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 Specialist-driven 2003 2004 2005 Primary Care-driven Source: FDA. IMS Health. Market Insights Team Analysis. September 2009 www.diahome.org 2008 2009 YTD FDA and EMEA decisions on new products since Jan 2007 generally coincide EMEA Approved Approved Pending or no submission Not approved or delayed 44 15 5 FDA Pending or no submission 14 Not approved or delayed 9 Source: IMS New Product Focus. FDA. EMEA. February 2009 www.diahome.org 5 7 R&D spending is growing while FDA approvals are declining PhRMA Member Global R&D Spending FDA NCE and Biologic Approvals R&D Spending Growth 60 $50 US$BN $40 50 39 39 33 32 28 40 36 26 $30 26 20 22 18 $20 $10 15 11 8 $0 1998 1999 2000 20 15 10 11 4 2001 2002 30 7 8 2003 2004 2005 Source: FDA; PhRMA, Pharmaceutical Industry Profile, 2009, updated annually www.diahome.org 9 10 5 2006 2007 2008 0 % R&D SPENDING GROWTH $60 REMS in 2009 go hand in hand with major new product approvals • 4 of the 18 NCE approvals in 2009 to date require REMS (Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies) • Major new products are arriving to the market with REMS that mandate MedGuide, communication plans, and more: ? – Efient (prasugrel) – Simponi (golimumab) – Multaq (dronedarone) • 24 REMS issued Apr-Dec 2008 • 31 REMS issued Jan-Jul 2009 already and counting Source: IMS, Market Insights Research www.diahome.org FDA is actively managing product safety through REMS, a FDAAA prerogative for the agency • Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies are becoming prominent in all of FDA’s safety-related actions • Unlike standard post-marketing studies demanded by FDA with specific scope and patient populations, REMS are designed by companies and negotiated with FDA • REMS components can include: • Medication guide (for new or previously approved products) • Communication plan • Elements to assure safe use (healthcare providers and patients registries) • Implementation system ? • Medication guide-only REMS applied to multiple products in the following therapy classes: • Antiepileptics • TNF inhibitors • Erythropoietin stimulating agents • Fluoro-quinolones • First formal class-wide REMS for opioids and botulinum toxin products pending FDA implementation Source: FDA, IMS Market Insights Research www.diahome.org FDA takes steps to improve its system for PMC design and monitoring • Deputy division director for safety - a position established under the agency's Safety First initiative - has assumed the postmarketing study coordinator job, and the safety regulatory manager will handle postmarketing study tracking; will manage safety and postmarketing study portfolio for their division • New policies and procedures are in place to "improve consistency in developing" post-market requirements and commitments and lead to "better designed studies and trials with effective and realistic time frames for initial completion”; improved tracking and reviewing, including standardizing policies and procedures across CDER review divisions and offices. ? • New postmarketing study DB implemented July 2009 will increase capacity for data capture, tracking and report generating Source: IMS, Market Insights Research www.diahome.org Black box warnings have declined after a peak in 2007 COUNT OF BLACKBOX WARNINGS 80 73 Major boxed warnings in 2009 70 58 60 50 49 50 40 28 30 22 21 20 16 10 0 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Jul-08 Source: FDA MedWatch, Aug 2009 www.diahome.org Jul-09 • Raptiva (withdrawn in EU and US) • Chantix, Wellbutrin for smoking cessation • Cimzia, Remicade for autoimmune diseases Black box warnings have declined after peak in 2007 COUNT OF BLACKBOX WARNINGS REMS are becoming a prominent safety management tool Major 2008 & 2009 NCEs with REMS 80 73 70 58 60 50 49 50 40 28 30 22 21 20 16 10 0 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Jul-08 Source: FDA MedWatch, Aug 2009 www.diahome.org Jul-09 • Cimzia • Efient • Entereg • Multaq • Promacta • Simponi • Vimpat 24 REMS Apr-Dec 2008 31 REMS Jan-Jul 2009 2008 FDA approvals of NCEs took place in a challenging environment Fewer new product submissions 24 in 2008* vs. 34 in 2007 Fewer “me-too” products Delayed or denied market access 36 complete response or not-approvable letters Restricted market access 26 NCE approvals Review delays 20% of PDUFA goals missed in 2008* FDA staff shortage Source: IMS, Market Insights Research. *Jan-Oct 2008. www.diahome.org 21 Risk Evaluation & Mitigation Strategies Patients are becoming increasingly active in reporting adverse events to FDA or manufacturers # ADVERSE EVENTS REPORTED TO FDA 300,000 250,000 200,000 150,000 100,000 50,000 0 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Healthcare Provider Source: FDA, Apr 2009 www.diahome.org 2005 2006 Consumer 2007 2008 Ongoing FDA activity on dissemination of medical information to consumers • Current system viewed as cumbersome and ineffective, according to study of National Association of Boards of Pharmacy • “Single patient document” considered as replacement of Consumer Medication Information, Patient Package Information and Medication Guide • Drug Facts Box REMS already tested in FDA pilot program ? • Formatted like nutritional labels • Quantify outcomes with and without the drug • Improve consumers’ knowledge of benefits and side effects • Elements to assure safe use (healthcare providers and patients registries) Source: FDA, IMS Market Insights Research www.diahome.org Agenda • • • • Global Trends US Trends Canadian Trends Harbingers of Change www.diahome.org Global economic slowdown has little impact on Canadian pharma market Sales by drug store and hospital channels – MAT August 2009 $25.0 Purchases ($ Billions) $20.0 $15.0 $10.0 $5.0 $0.0 MATJune August 2009 MAT 2007 Purchases Purchases Growth (%) Market 4 -Year Share (%) CAGR (%) Total $21.08 billion +7.2 100 +7.1 Drug Stores $18.76 billion +7.5 89.0 +6.9 $2.32 billion +4.9 11.0 +8.0 Hospitals 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 MAT Aug 2009 Source: IMS Health. Canadian Drug Stores and Hospital Purchases. MAT August 2009. www.diahome.org Canadian market shows gradual slowdown in growth since 2001 Canadian market performance, total drug store and hospital purchases, August 2009 18% 16.7% 16% 14% % Growth 12% 10% 13.6% 12.7% 11.5% 9.9% 12.8% 8.9% 9.6% 8% 7.1% 8.1% 6.3% 6.6% 7.2% 6.4% 6% 4% 2% 0% 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 MAT YTD Aug. Aug. 2009 2009 Source: IMS Health. Canadian Drug Stores and Hospital Purchases. MAT and YTD August 2009 www.diahome.org Canadian Market Performance Varies by Segment Brands contribute 58.5% to absolute growth – YTD August 2009 4.8 Total Brand Market* Total Branded Primary Care*** % CONTRIBUTION TO GROWTH 6.4 Total Market 58.5% 1.0 16.0% 16.4 Biotech** 11.7 Generics 0.0 5.0 10.0 % GROWTH * Brand market segment definition includes biotech and oncology segments ** Biotechnology market segment includes some oncology products *** Branded primary care growth is based on MAT June 2009 Source: IMS Health. Canadian Drug Stores and Hospital Purchases. YTD August 2009. www.diahome.org 27.5% 41.5% 15.0 20.0 CDR Performance through October 9, 2009 Number of Submissions* 172 – Withdrawn/Suspended 11 – Active (under review) 13 – Completed submissions** 148 • Positive recommendations • Negative recommendations 70 (47%) 72 (49%) *Includes resubmissions, withdrawn submissions and Advisory Committee on Pharmaceuticals Requests for Advice **Includes 6 ACP Requests for Advice (No Final Recommendation issued) Source: IMS Health. Provincial Reimbursement Advisor (PRA Weekly), October 14, 2009. www.diahome.org New Product Listings* Remain a Challenge – Especially Outside Quebec June’ 07 to May’ 09 (n=94 products) 35.0 % Products Listed Restricted Listing (Number of Products) 30.0 Full Listing (Number of Products) 25.0 (20) 20.0 (14) (16) 15.0 10.0 5.0 (8) (10) (10) (4) (6) (4) (11) (10) (7) (5) (8) (7) (8) (8) (8) (7) (3) 0.0 BC (4) (6) AB SK MB ON Average TTL** (days) Full 292 331 289 306 424 257 Restricted 458 301 382 418 399 293 *Listing status may not capture products covered by special drug programs QC 585 466 NB 368 434 NS 273 431 PE 399 412 NL NIHB 141 427 **TTL is calculated from the date the NOC was issued to the date the product was listed in a province. Products with launch delays of greater than one year (NOC to launch date) are excluded. Source: IMS Health. Provincial Reimbursement Advisor. FAME. August 2009. www.diahome.org Prescriber influence continues to shift to payers over the forecast period - Takeholder influence on pharmaceutical product selection: 10-point scale Stakeholder Practitioners: Physicians Pharmacists1 Nurses Payers/Managers: 2005 2009 2013 RNs, nurse practitioners 5.0 0.5 0.0 3.0 0.5 0.0 2.5 0.5 0.0 Government Drug Plans Federal/provincial/territorial 3.0 3.0 3.5 Drug Approval/Advisory Groups Common Drug Review and other drug expert groups 0.5 1.5 1.5 Regional Health Authorities Different provincial models (e.g. Alberta Health Services, LHINs2) 0.0 0.0 0.0 Private Drug Plans Insurers, employers and other third parties3 1.0 1.0 1.0 Consumers: Consumers at large, and organizations (seniors’/women’s groups, disease associations, consumer groups) 0.0 1.0 1.0 10.0 10.0 10.0 Consumers/Disease Groups Description FPs/GPs, specialists, residents Hospital/community pharmacy Total 1Pharmacists can legally prescribe in several provinces, and more prescribing authority is expected in upcoming years. Nurse practitioners can also legally prescribe in some provinces in limited circumstances. 2 Local Health Integration Networks in Ontario 3 Includes organizations set up to advise insurers/employers such as benefit managers, preferred-provider organizations Source: IMS Health. www.diahome.org Harbingers of Change Transforming events in the pharmaceutical market Global Pharmaceutical Perspectives May 25, 2017 www.diahome.org Harbingers of Change: Transforming Events in the Pharmaceutical Market Primum Non Nocere…to the Cardiovascular System: FDA Raises Approval Hurdles for Diabetes Medications Coloring Outside the Lines: R&D Companies Expand into Biosimilars A Compromised Immune System: Global Sourcing of API Overwhelms the FDA U.K. Gets Warm and Fuzzy: Permits “Top-Up” Payments for Drugs Not Covered by NHS Trimming the Smorgasbord: South Korea Mandates Economic Evaluation for National Reimbursement of Pharmaceuticals The Comeback Biz: Over-the-Counter Market Attractive to Pharmaceutical Manufacturers, Once Again All in One, One for All: The Polypill to Prevent Cardiovascular Disease among the Masses Giving Up on Godot: Shake Ups in R&D Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008). http://www.imshealth.com/portal/site/imshealth www.diahome.org Trimming the Smorgasbord: South Korea Mandates Economic Evaluation for National Reimbursement of Pharmaceuticals THE HARBINGER In January 2008, new drugs became subject to a Health Technology Assessment prior to being covered for reimbursement by South Korea’s National Health Insurance System IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 2008 www.diahome.org South Korea follows in the footsteps of developed markets THE CHANGE South Korea became the first Asian country to use health economic data in determining reimbursement and pricing decisions Ministry of Health hopes to promote rational use in this healthcare paradise • IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 2008 www.diahome.org Proving the value of medicines is becoming a global requirement THE IMPLICATIONS Conducting HEOR is increasingly a global exercise that can be made more efficient by adopting a core economic model to specific countries Companies will face greater price pressure in this growing market Other Asian markets (China, Japan, and Taiwan) are watching • IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 2008 www.diahome.org Primum Non Nocere... to the Cardiovascular System: FDA Raises Approval Hurdles for Diabetes Medications THE HARBINGER Following the recommendation of an advisory panel, the FDA ruled that Type 2 Diabetes drugs in development must be shown to not increase cardiovascular risk—even when there are no red flags raised in Phase II and III trials. Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008) www.diahome.org FDA exercises greater caution THE CHANGE First time the FDA has been so prescriptive about what risks must be ruled out Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008) www.diahome.org Companies must re-think their preapproval studies THE IMPLICATIONS Extreme regulatory caution seen in other therapeutic categories as well More robust, protracted trials the new reality, leading to higher costs and market entry delays Pre-approval studies must accommodate subpopulation analyses and be powered for adverse events, not just efficacy Developers should seek advice and guidance from FDA regularly Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008) www.diahome.org Coloring Outside the Lines: R&D-Based Companies Expand into Biosimilars THE HARBINGER Merck & Co. announced that it was creating a new unit, Merck Bioventures, to produce new and follow-on biologics. Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008) www.diahome.org Biosimilars hold promise of growth THE CHANGE Merck became the first major, pure-play R&D-based company to venture into biosimilars Other top-tier companies (Lilly, Pfizer, and AstraZeneca) also expressed their interest in the area Companies are open to exploring new avenues of growth, even if it means altering their fundamental business model Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008) www.diahome.org Market will not mimic that of smallmolecule generics THE IMPLICATIONS Significant barriers to entry could limit competition, and uptake will be dependent on substitution laws The biosimilars market may be a good match for the skills inherent in an R&D-based company Development, production and marketing costs will limit the ability to compete on price Big pharma’s entrance into the market is a credibility boost for the sector Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008) www.diahome.org Giving up on Godot THE HARBINGER During 2008, a number of “big pharma” companies shook up their research and development units with bold moves designed to spark innovation, improve productivity, and introduce a commercial focus into the scientific realm. In fact, of the top ten global pharmaceutical manufacturers, six announced major changes to their R&D models, and nine have made changes relating to the size, structure or focus of their R&D organizations. Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008) www.diahome.org It is futile to expect different results by repeating the same approach THE CHANGE Many companies have come to the realization that: • Certain therapy areas hold no further commercial potential without the (unlikely or very expensive) discovery of a major breakthrough • There is no longer room for a “build-it-and-they-will-come” mentality in drug development • Most good ideas are easier to accomplish in smaller, more nimble organizations • Small, entrepreneurial units are saleable • R&D is no longer a “sacred cow” when it comes to trimming expense Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008) www.diahome.org R&D in big pharma and biotech meeting in the middle THE IMPLICATIONS Developers must be given incentives for not meeting payer criteria Shareholders need to be conditioned to the fact that R&D projects may have to take longer, cost more, and carry greater risk Large pharmaceutical companies must foster greater flexibility and openness within their research units There will be no place to hide for the researcher who is not suited to an entrepreneurial environment Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008) www.diahome.org R&D in big pharma and biotech meeting in the middle THE IMPLICATIONS Companies must be open to new ways of working—including forming partnerships at earlier phases of development Biotechnology companies must look beyond their big pharma customers to changing decision makers and their needs Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008) www.diahome.org A Compromised Immune System: Global Sourcing of API Overwhelms the FDA THE HARBINGER Violations in Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) at an API producer in China claimed 149 lives and caused Baxter Healthcare to recall its heparin sodium injection. Later in the year, the FDA blocked more than 30 Ranbaxy products and APIs that originated in India because of GMP violations. Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008) www.diahome.org Can the FDA be the “quality control” unit for the world? THE CHANGE China and India are now the primary producers of API used in the US The FDA is equipped to inspect only a smattering of the thousands of foreign plants each year Lawsuits in the heparin case are the first to involve Chinese manufacturing defects in drugs Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008) www.diahome.org Some API suppliers “let the buyer beware” THE IMPLICATIONS US regulators’ efforts to inspect off-shore facilities will intensify Greater collaboration will develop between regulatory agencies Manufacturers must assume more of the burden for ensuring the safety of their supply chain and weigh savings against risks Source: IMS INTELLIGENCE.360 (2008) www.diahome.org Global Pharma Market: Performance and Outlook to 2013 Paul Crotty General Manager, IMS Health Canada www.diahome.org