Modern biotechnology creates next generation therapies and cures, delivers value to patients and the economy, cuts greenhouse gas emissions, reduces reliance on fossil fuels, and generates higher crop yields with fewer resources. These critical activities and advances thrive only in an environment where biotechnology is supported by policies that maintain incentives for future innovation including the form of intellectual property rights while, at the same time, providing fair and equitable consumer access to innovative products. On both fronts, biotechnology enterprises face unprecedented challenges that, if not addressed, will slow the innovation engine. The consequent negative effects will be felt by all nations. Today, the biotechnology industry faces enormous challenges caused by deep public concern about pricing and access to medicines. The consequent political and public pressure is leading to rapid fire and poorly considered legislation. This, in turn, will likely result in an erosion of incentives to innovate, as it impacts return on investment and access to capital.
IMI AMR Accelerator: Allow the few to make the most of their resources
OpinionIn 2019, a new AMR accelerator kicked off under the aegis of the Innovative Medicines Initiative as a follow-up and evolutive next step to the former New Drugs for Bad Bugs programme. European Biotechnology spoke with Rob Stavenger, its coordinator at GlaxoSmithKline, about the goals of the €295m initiative, its cooperation with SMEs, and the relevance of push and pull incentives in the field.
The AMR business (Part II)
BackgroundSMEs active in antibiotic development are trying to adapt to the uncertain AMR business. Meanwhile, the European IMI AMR accelerator kicked off.
Zealand Pharma acquires Encycle
Latest NewsZealand Pharma A/S has acquired Encycle Therapeutics Inc, including a peptide therapeutics platform and library.
The AMR business (Part I)
BackgroundAntibiotic developers struggle with uncertain market conditions, weak reimbursement schemes and low turnover once a drug is approved. Experts are trying to figure out the best way to balance push and pull incentives.
Researchers target ferroptosis resistance of cancer cells
Latest NewsGerman researchers have found a novel way to induce iron-induced necrosis, a process which they want to turn against cancer.
Biotech Innovation Requires a Predictable Patent System
OpinionModern biotechnology creates next generation therapies and cures, delivers value to patients and the economy, cuts greenhouse gas emissions, reduces reliance on fossil fuels, and generates higher crop yields with fewer resources. These critical activities and advances thrive only in an environment where biotechnology is supported by policies that maintain incentives for future innovation including the form of intellectual property rights while, at the same time, providing fair and equitable consumer access to innovative products. On both fronts, biotechnology enterprises face unprecedented challenges that, if not addressed, will slow the innovation engine. The consequent negative effects will be felt by all nations. Today, the biotechnology industry faces enormous challenges caused by deep public concern about pricing and access to medicines. The consequent political and public pressure is leading to rapid fire and poorly considered legislation. This, in turn, will likely result in an erosion of incentives to innovate, as it impacts return on investment and access to capital.
iOmx: Papadimitriou at the helm
AppointmentsiOmx Therapeutics AG has named Apollon Papadimitriou as Chief Executive Officer.
CHMP selects drugs for EU market approval
Latest NewsEMA’s human medicines committee (CHMP) recommended seven medicines for approval at its October 2019 meeting.
New risk factor for autism and epilepsy identified
Latest NewsA molecular transporter is critical for the proper maturation of neurons underlying neurodevelopmental disorders.
Investors make commitment to net zero emissions by 2050
OpinionThere was unparalleled surprise in New York when a powerful alliance of UN-backed asset owners announced it will drive it’s portfolio companies to carbon neutrality by 2050. This could mean a fundamental change in capital markets.