On the contrary, often pharma proponents will gloss over the fact that most “failures” are discovered and canned at a small fraction of the investment of getting a drug to market (when it’s obvious it won’t do what you need or has other challenges).
Actually not in the contrary - you are right. It’s just that the failures often cost a small fraction. They don’t get to 95% testing and approval before “nope, not even close”.
No, that's not quite accurate - the phases are effectively additive.
37% fail in Phase 1. Of those that make it through, 69% of those fail in Phase 2, and of those, 42% fail in Phase 3.
So, of 1,000 possibles, you have 630 make it through Phase 1, and 195 that make it through phase 2, i.e. 80.5% of your drug candidates didn't even make it to Phase 3, that "most expensive phase".
A more accurate phrasing would be that 42% of the drugs that made it through Phase 2 fail to make it through Phase 3.
Supposing the cost ramps up exponentially at each phase, e.g. it costs $10 million to get to Phase 1, $100 million to get to Phase 2, and $1 billion to get to Phase 3, then we see the total expenditure for 1000 possible drugs as:
$ 3.7 billion for Phase 1 failures (370 drugs)
$ 43.5 billion for Phase 2 failures (435 drugs)
$ 82 billion for Phase 3 failures ( 82 drugs)
$113 billion for Phase 3 successes (113 drugs)
This sums to a little over $242 billion spent against 113 successful drugs, or about $2.14 billion per successful drug, or more generally, accounting for failed drugs, the full cost of a successful drug is a little more than twice what was directly spent on its development.
Certainly I do not mean to imply that Phase 1 and Phase 2 failures are cost-free. But it is challenging to measure. As seen elsewhere in this thread, Gilead essentially included the acquisition of another company who had a whole retinue of drugs and product lines as "R&D" for Truvada, I believe. That is creative accounting that would not pass an audit or SEC filing, which is why Gilead only counts it as an R&D cost in their press releases...
It certainly should count; that company didn't get delivered for nothing by the Drug Discovery Fairy. And even more: the companies that didn't get bought by Gilead should also count, since the funders of all those small companies could not tell ahead of time which would succeed enough to be bought out.
No, it really shouldn't. If I acquire a drug company that has, say, 100 patents on a suite of drugs for $1B (just using nice round numbers), I don't get to say "I spent $1B on "R&D" for 1 drug" as a sunk cost.
R&D is a sunk cost. Presumably acquiring an active company with a portfolio is an investment.
Published estimates of trial costs from a 2011 systematic review ranged over an OOM.[1]
A 2017 report focused on 7 top-20 companies and 726 studies from 2010-2015 found " median cost of conducting a study from protocol approval to final clinical trial report was US$3.4 million for phase I trials involving patients, $8.6 million for phase II trials and $21.4 million for phase III trials". [2] These are not all that far off from another 2016 study on cost drivers of pharma clinical trials in the US using means and breaking down costs by therapeutic area. [3]
Plugging the first study's numbers into your 1000-drug profile, we'd have:
$ 1.3 billion for Phase 1 failures (370 drugs)
$ 3.7 billion for Phase 2 failures (435 drugs)
$ 1.8 billion for Phase 3 failures ( 82 drugs)
$ 2.4 billion for Phase 3 successes (113 drugs)
That sums to $9.2 billion spent against 113 successful drugs, or about $80 million per successful drug. This implies the full cost of a successful drug is almost 4x what was spend on its development.
One limit here is we're working with medians, not means, and I wouldn't be surprised if this is an underestimate of clinical trial costs.
Roche has had pretty stable net income (profit) of $9.2-$15.2B/year from 2011-2023 against revenue from $49.9-$72B/year in the same time period. Using this estimate, ignoring inflation, if they ran 1,000 clinical trials per year it would account for a maximum of about 18% of their costs and they'd get 113 new drugs out of it annually.
Obviously that is not what's happening: there are an average of 53 FDA new drug approvals per year across the entire industry. If Roche was the only pharma company running clinical trials, the total cost of those trials would be more like $4B, so a max of about 10% of their annual costs. In reality this estimate makes it seem like it must be substantially lower.
The Congressional Budget Office[4] says total pharma R&D spending in 2019 was $83 billion. With 53 new drug approvals per year on average, that implies about an average cost of about $600 million per drug in R&D spending, compared with the $80 million estimate obtained above.
So this makes it sound like running clinical trials account for only about 10% of total R&D spending. Given that Roche's costs alone look to be in the tens of billions per year, as compared to $83B or so annually for R&D across the industry, it also looks like R&D is only a part of the story on cost drivers for pharma companies. Google is not being helpful on this question (almost all the conversation is on R&D cost, it seems), but my guess is it's costs of manufacture, legal, sales, etc.
> it also looks like R&D is only a part of the story on cost drivers for pharma companies ... but my guess is it's costs of manufacture, legal, sales, etc.
Marketing. At least 7 of the top 10 pharma companies globally have marketing as a multiple of R&D for their spending (sometimes up to 7x). IIRC, at the other 3, it still exceeds R&D, less egregiously.
The big issue with "Marketing" spend is that though these numbers are global, there are only two countries in the world where you can advertise prescription medicines to consumers: the US, and New Zealand (and the latter, if I recall, is trying to phase it out, and only allowed it after being bullied by the US on a Trade Agreement).
So you end up with "US Marketing spend at many pharmaceutical companies grossly outpaces their global R&D spend" (and while a not insignificant portion of R&D happens in the US, most of those companies also have a notable R&D investment in Europe).
Marketing wouldn't go to zero without that, of course, but it'd be a huge sea change.
Actually not in the contrary - you are right. It’s just that the failures often cost a small fraction. They don’t get to 95% testing and approval before “nope, not even close”.