制药生物技术研发中的生产力:经验和联盟的作用

P. Danzon, S. Nicholson, Nuno Sousa Pereira
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引用次数: 320

摘要

利用1988-2000年期间900多家公司的数据,我们估计了公司的整体经验、相关治疗类别的经验、跨类别经验的多样化、该类别的行业经验以及与大型和小型公司的联盟对特定阶段生物技术和制药研发成功率的影响。我们发现,不同治疗类别的成功概率差异很大,并且与类别的平均销售额呈负相关,这与动态竞争进入模型是一致的。经验的回报在统计上是显著的,但在经济上对于相对简单的1期试验来说是很小的。我们发现有证据表明,对于关注药物疗效的更大、更复杂的后期试验,公司(在所有治疗类别中)的整体经验产生了巨大的、正的、递减的回报。有一些证据表明,如果由经验集中而不是广泛的公司开发药物,则更有可能完成第三阶段(范围不经济)。有证据表明,在第一阶段,企业之间存在积极的知识溢出。然而,对于第二阶段和第三阶段,全行业经验的估计影响是负面的,这可能反映了在拥挤的治疗类别中更高的食品和药物管理局(FDA)批准标准,或者这些类别的公司必须追求更困难的目标。在联盟中开发的产品往往有更高的成功概率,至少对于更复杂的第二阶段和第三阶段试验,特别是如果被许可方是一家大公司。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Productivity in Pharmaceutical Biotechnology R&D: The Role of Experience and Alliances
Using data on over 900 firms for the period 1988-2000, we estimate the effect on phase-specific biotech and pharmaceutical R&D success rates of a firm's overall experience, its experience in the relevant therapeutic category, the diversification of its experience across categories, the industry's experience in the category, and alliances with large and small firms. We find that success probabilities vary substantially across therapeutic categories and are negatively correlated with mean sales by category, which is consistent with a model of dynamic, competitive entry. Returns to experience are statistically significant but economically small for the relatively straightforward phase 1 trials. We find evidence of large, positive and diminishing returns to a firm's overall experience (across all therapeutic categories) for the larger and more complex late-stage trials that focus on a drug's efficacy. There is some evidence that a drug is more likely to complete phase 3 if developed by firms whose experience is focused rather than broad (diseconomies of scope). There is evidence of positive knowledge spillovers across firms for phase 1. However, for phase 2 and phase 3 the estimated effects of industry-wide experience are negative, which may reflect either higher Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval standards in crowded therapeutic categories or that firms in such categories must pursue more difficult targets. Products developed in an alliance tend to have a higher probability of success, at least for the more complex phase 2 and phase 3 trials, and particularly if the licensee is a large firm.
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