ePT--the Electronic Newsletter of Pharmaceutical Technology
Companies launched 25 new active substances in 2007, a decline of 19% from the previous year, according to a new report from Parexel International.
Waltham, MA (Aug. 25)-Companies launched 25 new active substances (NASes) in 2007, a decline of 19% from the previous year, according to a new report from Parexel International.
“The US Drug Approval Trends and Yearbook 2008–2009” report also reveals that only 16 new molecular entities (NMEs) were approved in the US during 2007. Yet the number of US marketing applications filed for NMEs rose to 28 in 2007, a 33% increase from 2006.
“NME and NAS approvals are key measures of new-drug productivity in the biopharmaceutical industry, and these measures tend to improve based on the volume of new-drug submissions,” said Mark Mathieu, director of publications at Parexel, in a press release. He called the recent increase in the number of NME submissions an encouraging sign.
In the press release, Mathieu also said Parexel’s analysis shows that “record percentages of drug-marketing applications that the US Food and Drug Administration has designated as priority submissions are going straight to approval in the first review cycle.”
Among the NMEs that FDA approved in 2007 were Novartis’s (Basel) hypertension drug “Tekturna,” GlaxoSmithKline’s (London) breast-cancer treatment “Tykerb,” and Merck’s (Whitehouse Station, NJ) HIV treatment “Isentress.”
Drug Solutions Podcast: Gliding Through the Ins and Outs of the Pharma Supply Chain
November 14th 2023In this episode of the Drug Solutions podcast, Jill Murphy, former editor, speaks with Bourji Mourad, partnership director at ThermoSafe, about the supply chain in the pharmaceutical industry, specifically related to packaging, pharma air freight, and the pressure on suppliers with post-COVID-19 changes on delivery.