
Report: FDA New Drug Approvals Dip in 2016
A new report from HBM Partners said FDA new molecular entity approvals have dropped to 19 in 2016 from 45 in 2015.
FDA approval of new molecular entities (NMEs) took a sharp decline in 2016 according to a new report released in January 2017 from HBM Partners. In 2016 FDA approved 19 new therapeutic drugs compared to 45 in 2015, the report noted. The
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A number of big pharma companies had zero NMEs approved in 2016. This list includes notable names such as Johnson & Johnson, Bristol-Myers Squibb, GlaxoSmithKline, Novartis, Takeda, and AstraZeneca. Biogen, Merck & Co., and Eli Lilly each earned two NME approvals in 2016. But the HBM report asserts big pharma isn’t necessarily to blame for the drop in drug approvals. Mid-sized and smaller pharma/biotech companies also saw decreases in approval numbers.
Only four cancer drugs were approved in 2016, more than any other therapeutic area, although cancer drug approvals were down from 15 in 2015. Approximately half of the drugs approved in 2016 were acquired through mergers and acquisitions, or in-licensed, the report said. The report also noted that drugs developed in house have a higher percentage of approvals.
Source: HBM Partners
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