New Books
New books from the publisher of the Journal of CommercialBiotechnology
New books from the publisher of the Journal of CommercialBiotechnology
If you walk into most private biotech company boardrooms today, it is likely that you will hear a discussion about whether to go public. Companies at every stage of development are either getting ready to file for an initial public offering or thinking…
Industrial biotechnology is the commercial application of biotechnology using cells or components of cells, like enzymes, for industrial production processes including consumer goods, bioenergy and biomaterials. In the last years this area has gone thr…
Fostering technology transfer in industrial biotechnology by academic spin-offs Read Post »
Ihave had the pleasure of participating in national forums on biotechnology development in diverse countries. A common theme I see is that emerging economies wish to develop ‘a biotechnology industry like the United States.’ I generally temper these ambitions by explaining that the United States does not have a biotechnology industry per se, but rather a handful of states have very strong biotechnology concentrations and many other states are still trying to build their domestic biotechnology industries. So the lesson for many emerging economies is to set ambitions at the US-state level rather than the US-national level. Furthermore, I also caution against aiming for drug development. Drug development is extremely expensive and risky—focusing on domestic agricultural or industrial biotechnology opportunities may be a better option.
Building biotechnology in India – Drugs are not the answer Read Post »
In recent years, the major research-intensive biopharmaceutical companies (big pharma) have come face to face with a perfect storm of eroding profit margins from blockbuster expiration and generic competition coupled with growing R&D expenses and d…
Pharmaceutical R&D Productivity: The Role of Alliance Read Post »
Canada plays a significant role in the global advancement of scientific discoveries and their translation into commercial opportunities, but is viewed as not fully realizing its commercial potential. A significant problem has been a lack of sufficient venture capital to take early-stage companies to the next level. Several recent developments may signal the arrival of a more positive venture-funding environment for life sciences and health technology enterprises, including the development of the Canadian government’s C$400 million Venture Capital Action Plan; pharmaceutical companies electing to establish or investing in venture funds and providing strategic support to early-stage ventures, including through the creation of research centres; and recent successful liquidity events for venture investors.
Canadian Venture Capital – Unlocking the Funding Challenge Read Post »
Abstract
The growing share of biopharmaceuticals is paralleled by an increasing interest in biogenerics, as blockbuster biologics are approaching their patent expiries. Companies need to make decisions whether to invest in biosimilars or in biobetters with enhanced properties, the latter enabling favorable differentiation vis-à-vis the original product on the one hand and biosimilars on the other hand. Net present value (NPV) modelling was applied to evaluate the financial attractiveness of two categories of biobetters in comparison to biosimilars, and recommendations are made which options should be preferred depending on a company’s business model.
The FTC is reportedly seeking $1 billion from pharmaceutical companies for the role in paying generic companies not to challenge
Why pharma's 'anti-competitive' practices may actually be good Read Post »
This paper is part of the free Open Access archive of the Journal of Commercial Biotechnology
A maturing industry: Strategic patenting trends, US and academic dominance, and the global biotechnology landscape
Go to paperABSTRACT: Patent analytical da…
For those who missed the live presentation, here is the discussion of the 2014 Scientific American Worldview scorecard, featuring myself,
Scientific American Discusses 2014 Worldview Global Biotechnology Innovation Assessment Read Post »