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The second paper in the PwC Pharma 2020 series, this report provides a visionary perspective on the change drivers that will impact research and development productivity and offer greater opportunities for the development of more, truly innovative products giving greater benefit to healthcare payers, providers and patients, and greater value for the companies involved.
The report suggests new technologies and the development of a virtual R&D process will improve our understanding of the underlying biology of the human body and its diseases, allowing researchers to better predict the effects of new drug candidates before they enter human beings. It discusses the fact that these changes could enable the shortening of the R&D process by up to two thirds, a dramatic reduction in attrition rates and a substantial reduction in the costs of clinical trials.
In order to capitalise on the opportunities these changes afford, the report explores the implications for today's pharma company and the issues it must address if it is to operate most effectively in what will be a more connected and demanding world. These implications and the risks and choices involved will vary across companies. Typical challenges may include; deciding which elements of the innovation process to pursue and retain in-house versus accessing via new types of strategic partnership the operational changes needed to improve speed of response for the differing types of innovative treatments, the impact of migrating from the current linear phase R&D process towards in-life testing and live licensing, approaches to collaborating more closely with regulators and health care providers about pricing, demonstrating efficacy, outcome benefit and value for money, the future role of differing channels to market, the supply chain and the opportunities this offers your organisation as a source of revenue generation, the implications for your business model and human capital issues.
Pharma 2020: Marketing the future, the third in the series discusses the key forces reshaping the pharmaceutical marketplace, including the growingpower of healthcare payers, providers and patients, and the changes required to create a marketing and sales model that is fit for the 21st century.
Pharma 2020: Challenging business models, the fourth in the Pharma 2020 series, this report explains why Pharma's fully integrated business models may not be the best option for the pharma industry in 2020 and why more creative collaboration models may be more attractive. The paper also evaluates the advantages and disadvantages of the alternative business models and how each stands up against the challenges facing the industry.