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Summary HPI4001 Case 5

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  • October 4, 2022
  • 8
  • 2021/2022
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Lecture Case 5 Pharmaceutical Market EH
1.Pharmaceutical Market

Roles of the pharmaceutical industry:
 To develop and produce medicines and vaccines
-Drugs as a method to preserve health and save lives
-Next to nutrition, sanitation and medical care (also important)
 To drive innovation in drugs
-To develop, test and produce drugs safety for human use
-Early years very successful: e.g. insulin (diabetes), antibiotics and polio vaccination
 Economic growth factor worldwide

Example of pharmaceutical success:
-Decreased number of deaths among HIV-cases in Europe due to availability of effective drugs.
-Increase in life expectancy (2000-2009) is also partly a result of innovative medicine

Number of employment in pharmaceutical industry is important -> this number is increasing in
Europe (25% is involved in R&D department). Pharmaceutical R&D expenditure in Europe, USA and
Japan have significantly increased (more than double sometimes) -> so there is a lot of investment.

- Nowadays with corona we will expect that expenditure continues to increase
- Currently Netherlands spend 7% of healthcare budget on drugs (low percentage compared to
other countries).

Pharmaceutical expenditures:
 Spending on pharmaceuticals account for a significant proportion of total health spending in
European countries
 Increased consumption of pharmaceuticals due to the introduction of new drugs and the
ageing of populations (comorbidities in elderly -> main consumers of drugs)
 Reforms in pharmaceutical market (opportunities to be more efficient in healthcare
spending)
 Around 60% of drug spending is publicly financed on average across OECD countries (18% in
Bulgaria to 90% in UK)

Characteristics of the pharmaceutical market:
 Multinational enterprises
-Lot of mergers and acquisitions
 Barriers to entry by the protection of product by patents
-Monopoly position (when there is a patent, only this company is allowed to sell this drug
which leads to a monopoly position -> could lead to high price, however certain regulations
are set by the government to contain this)
-Research and development expenditures (receive back some costs by patents, otherwise
company could just copy your drug)
 High willingness to pay for drugs
-Price regulation (talk between industry and payer)
-Often reimbursed in whole or in part by insurance
 More regulation in drug development
-Due to Thalomid (1960) which was a drug for sleeping that cured morning sickness in
pregnant women but also caused problems (malformations) in their babies later.

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,  Product uncertainty: regarding side-effects, safety and effectiveness of the new drug
-Therefore payers are using some new coverage decisions.
 Aggressive advertisement (toward physician) from pharmaceutical industry and
government bans for end of users (you are not allowed to promote drugs on television)
-Detailing activity to doctors (a sales representative visits a doctor to discuss the
characteristics of a specific drug
-Brochures in doctors’ office, advertising in medical journals etc
 You often need a prescription from a physician to get a drug

Government interventions: because of specific nature of pharmaceutical market; some examples:
1. Drug development regulation (clinical trials)
2. Entry barriers - without patent protection, no innovation
3. Drug price regulation
4. Ban on advertisement (on television etc)
5. Specific regulation by example for orphan drugs
6. Reimbursement/access: co-payment or promotion of generics

2.Type of drugs

Ethical (or prescription) drugs: licensed medicine that is regulated by legislation to require a
prescription before it can be obtained

OTC (Over The Counter) -drugs: medicines that may be sold without a prescription in contrast to
prescription drugs (e.g. aspirin)

Brand(ed) drug: drug which is produced and distributed with patent protection (when one company
only is allowed to produce and distribute this drug basically)

Generic drug (generics): drug which is produced and distributed without patent protection.
- Contains the same active substance as the reference medicine and it is used at the same
dose to treat the same disease.
- However the inactive ingredients, name, appearance and packaging can be different
- Generic medicines are manufactured according to the same quality standards as all other
medicines (EMA definition)

Typically generic drugs increase efficiency in the pharmaceutical market because they are often 30-
40% lower in costs than branded drug which leads to greater access to healthcare (due to reducing
out of pocket contribution in some countries)

Generic drugs have a high contribution in the total pharmaceutical market
- In Netherlands, 70% of the drugs are generic drugs
- Use have increased due to economic crisis (reduced prices of drugs)

Me-too drug: drug that is structurally very similar to already known drugs, with only minor
differences (e.g. Fosamax consist of alendronate and vitamin D which already existed but now it is
combined into the new drug). Reasons/Rationale for developing this type of me-too drugs are:
 To avoid patent protection (add extra element to avoid patent and make it new drug)
 Drug companies tend to present the drug as new in order to get it patented (even if it slightly
differs)
 Improved technical properties
 More and more difficult to develop new drugs
Me-too problems:

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