Drug development pipelines are the lifeblood of the pharmaceutical industry. It is crucial for investors to understand milestones like FDA approvals and the impact of losing exclusivity on profits to navigate the dynamic health care sector. This piece provides an investment-focused overview of a typical drug’s lifecycle.
This piece is Part 1 in a 2-part series on the fundamentals of investing in pharmaceutical companies. The second part will delve into the key characteristics that can help inform an investigational treatment’s success.
Investigational new drugs go through a rigorous process to ensure efficacy and safety. In the U.S., this process takes, on average, 10 to 15 years to ensure approved treatments are beneficial and safe for patients.1 Key regulatory steps include:
Though the process for all investigational drugs is largely the same, regulatory bodies have outlined potential accelerated pathways to speed up the availability of drugs that treat serious diseases.2 When granted, these decisions can notably impact the return on investment for investigational drugs and can thus have a significant impact on biotech stock prices.3 The U.S. FDA has four key such designations:4
Pharmaceutical sponsors can also, subject to FDA approval, design combined or hybrid clinical trials (e.g., phase 1/2, or phase 2/3) that can reduce the time and resources required for drug development. Combined trials can also allow for faster patient recruitment and more efficient utilization of data while collecting all the necessary data required for regulatory review. Regulatory agencies like the FDA closely review the clinical trial design and results to ensure they meet the necessary standards for approval.
Once a treatment is approved, the drug receives market exclusivity for a certain period. Different types of products receive different exclusivity timelines, though in most cases, a five-year exclusivity is provided. The FDA can provide certain extensions to exclusivity, including treatments for orphan diseases (those with less than 200,000 patients in the U.S.) and treatments for pediatric illnesses. A treatment can also receive additional exclusivity after its approval if it receives subsequent approval for a new illness or in a new delivery form (e.g., a pill rather than an injection).
Once the exclusivity period concludes, competition is allowed to enter the market, usually at a discounted price. These are equivalent products approved through abbreviated pathways. Depending on the technology, the equivalent product is referred to as a:
When equivalent products enter the market, prices for the drugs decrease significantly. A single generic competitor can lead to price reductions of 30%, while five competing generics can lead to price reductions of nearly 85%.6
Manufacturers of the branded drug face what is colloquially referred to as a “patent cliff” once a drug faces generic competition, as sales of the branded product may decline up to 90%.7 To replenish sales, pharmaceutical firms often rely on expected drug launches and mergers and acquisitions (M&A).
The pharmaceutical space is highly specialized, often relying on complex chemistry and biology. However, there are also some basic tenants of the drug discovery process that can be useful to investors when examining the industry, deciphering clinical updates, or understanding the catalysts behind stock-price movements.
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