 |
|
|
|
Drug Development & Approval Process
The fully capitalized cost to develop a new drug, including studies conducted
after receiving regulatory approval, averages $1.2 billion, according to an analysis
by the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development. The Tufts Center study was based on compound-specific
costs for a sample of 17 investigational biopharmaceuticals from four firms that first entered clinical testing
from 1990 to 2003. Notably, only five in 5,000 compounds that enter preclinical testing make it to
human testing, and only one of the five tested in people is approved by the Food & Drug Administration (FDA).
A new biotech product took 97.7 months on average to wend its way through clinical development and
regulatory review, about eight percent longer than for pharmaceuticals, according to the Tufts Center study.
| Clinical Trials |
|
Preclinical |
|
Phase I |
Phase II |
Phase III |
|
FDA |
|
Phase IV |
| Years |
6.5 |
- |
1.5 |
2 |
3.5 |
- |
1.5 |
15 total |
- |
Test
Population |
Laboratory & animal studies |
- |
20 to 80 healthy volunteers |
100 to 300 patient volunteers |
1,000 to 3,000 patient volunteers |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Purpose |
Assess safety &
biological activity |
File
Investi-
gational
New Drug (IND)
at FDA |
Determine safety & dosage |
Evaluate effectiveness, look for side efects |
Confirm
effectiveness, monitor adverse reactions from long-term use |
File New Drug
Appli-
cation (NDA)
at FDA |
Review
Process/
approval |
- |
Additional
post-
market
testing |
Success
Rate |
5,000
compounds evaluated |
- |
- |
5
enter clinical trials |
- |
- |
1
approved |
- |
- |
Source: Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development.
|
|
|
|
|
|