Published: September 10, 2010
Nearly 400 Medicines and Vaccines in Development to Fight Infectious Diseases
BOSTON - (BUSINESS WIRE) - Critical challenges remain in the centuries-old battles against
infectious diseases, particularly as bacteria and viruses mutate and as
the threat of bioterrorism grows. Responding to this need, America's
biopharmaceutical research companies this year have 395 new medicines
and vaccines in the pipeline to fight infectious diseases. All 395 are
in later stages of development, meaning in clinical trials or under Food
and Drug Administration (FDA) review.
Scientists have made huge strides against infectious diseases, which
until the 1920s were the leading cause of death in the United States.
Still, more than 9.5 million people worldwide die each year from
infectious diseases. Of particular concern today are virulent forms of
"super bugs" that have mutated and grown resistant to available
antibiotics. Among medicines in development are those for resistant
forms of tuberculosis and staph infections, according a new report,
"Medicines in Development for Infectious Diseases 2010," prepared by the
Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA).
"Infectious diseases continue to cause great human suffering, and the
effort to conquer them is one of the greatest human endeavors," said
PhRMA President and CEO John J. Castellani. "Many once-deadly diseases
have been nearly wiped out or are effectively controlled thanks to
medical progress, but much more needs to be done."
Some of the diseases targeted plague the developing world, while others
threaten the lives of humans in every country, including the U.S. In
Africa, for example, a child dies every 45 seconds of malaria. Six
medicines and five vaccines for malaria are currently in development,
according to the PhRMA report.
Scientists are also working to prevent, treat or cure other devastating
diseases that mostly strike people in the developing world, such as the
Ebola virus, dengue fever, yellow fever, typhoid and cholera.
Increasing attention is also being paid to "super bugs," like
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), that have
spread throughout the world. In the U.S., two million drug-resistant
infections are reported each year, causing great suffering and costing
the health system up to $34 billion a year, according to the Infectious
Disease Society.
Only two percent of staph infections in the U.S. were drug-resistant in
1974. The percentage jumped to 63% by 2004. Staph infections now kill
more people in the U.S. than AIDS, according to the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
When staph bacteria spread to the bloodstream, a life-threatening
illness known as sepsis can occur. Sepsis, which has increased by 91.3%
over the last 10 years, is expected to kill 215,000 people in the U.S.
this year.
Eighteen new medicines and vaccines to treat or prevent staph infections
and sepsis are currently in development, according to the PhRMA report.
Scientists also are developing treatments for infectious diseases as
varied as herpes, rabies, meningitis and SARS.
A total of 145 vaccines are in development to prevent a variety of
infections, including a number of forms of influenza. Additionally, 88
antibiotics and 96 antivirals are in development. Treatments for HIV
infection are not included in the most recent report, but a 2009 survey
identified 97 medicines and vaccines in testing for HIV/AIDS.
Of the 395 medicines and vaccines in the current report, 24 are on a
"fast track" -- a process designed to facilitate the development and
expedite the review of drugs to treat serious diseases and fill a
critical, unmet medical need. The status is assigned by the FDA. "Fast
track" medicines in development include those for hepatitis C, severe
sepsis and pneumonia.
Scientists are also working to thwart the potential devastation of
biological warfare agents. Ten separate treatments for anthrax and three
for smallpox are in development. Although medical progress eradicated
naturally occurring smallpox in humans worldwide by 1980, concerns
remain that the virus could be used as a bioterrorism weapon.
Development of a new medicine or vaccine, from the laboratory to
clinical trials to FDA approval, takes 10-15 years on average and costs
$1.3 billion.
The full report, Medicines in Development for Infectious Diseases 2010,
is available at www.phrma.org.
Information about clinical trials is at www.clinicaltrials.gov.
PhRMA represents the country's leading pharmaceutical research and
biotechnology companies, which are devoted to inventing medicines that
allow patients to live healthier lives. PhRMA members alone invested an
estimated $45.8 billion in 2009 in discovering and developing new
medicines. Industry-wide research and investment reached a record $65.3
billion in 2009.
PhRMA Internet Address: http://www.phrma.org
For
information on how innovative medicines save lives: http://www.innovation.org
For
information on the Partnership for Prescription Assistance: http://www.pparx.org
For
information on the danger of imported drugs: http://www.buysafedrugs.info
For
more information on public health emergencies: http://www.rxresponse.org

PhRMA
Cindy Loose, 202-835-3460
cloose@phrma.org
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