India to capture
10% of global clinical research market within '10: E&Y
Survey
Posted AtPharmaBiz
Extension of geographical boundaries
for clinical research offers the opportunities to crunch
timelines at a lower cost. The selection of strategic
locations for clinical research in case of global trials
is becoming important as it is based on the long term
planning of the company. The language, patient pool,
availability of reliable investigators and institutions,
easy and fast recruitment possibilities and the regulatory
framework are the prime considerations of the companies
while choosing various locations worldwide, for global
clinical research.
According to a latest report based on a survey by Ernst
& Young India-'An analytical survey on the clinical
trial activities of multinational pharmaceutical companies
in India', by 2008, about 30 per cent of the global
clinical trial activities will take place outside the
US and Western Europe due to high demand for study subjects
and well trained clinical research professionals. India,
China, Eastern Europe and Latin America are the key
markets earmarked for rapid growth in clinical research.
India is estimated to capture about 10 per cent of the
global clinical research market within the next five
years.
Several MNC pharma companies have been conducting their
clinical development activities in India for the last
5-10 years. They have been scaling up their investments
aggressively by setting up dedicated clinical research
teams to initiate and monitor pivotal clinical studies.
Apart from local registration trials, MNC pharma companies
are also contributing patients from India for multi-centric
global trials of drugs for FDA and EMEA submissions.
Off-shoring clinical development to India has become
a strategic imperative for most global pharmaceutical
companies. Competition for talent, new technologies
and easier market access have accelerated the process
of R&D globalisation, with countries such as India and
China hosting significant volumes of R&D activity for
multinationals.
E & Y India has conducted a nationwide survey of senior
executives of the MNC pharma companies in India to analyse
their clinical research activity in the country.
Of the total 29 companies surveyed, 17 are conducting
clinical trails in India. About 24 per cent of the respondents
from companies conducting trials in India said that
they are carrying out BE / BA studies, 53 per cent of
them are conducting phase II trials, 88 per cent of
them are conducting phase III trials, 18 per cent are
carrying out biometric studies and 24 per cent are conducting
other studies.
Various therapeutic segments where MNC pharma have already
initiated clinical trials are oncology, anti-infectives,
psychiatry, cardiology, neurology, gastroenterology,
ophthalmology and dermatology, the largest segment being
oncology.
Several driving forces have positioned India as an emerging
hub for collaborative clinical trial activities which
include the number of potential clinical trial subjects,
cost savings, disease profile of the country, and intent
to support future domestic marketing.
Several business risks having significant bearing on
the strategic decision to undertake trials in India
such as IPR and patient data protection, documentation
and record keeping, regulator non-compliance, human
subject protection / institutional ethics, import and
export requirements, third party contract non-compliance
etc.
MNCs are following certain strategies to face these
risks by conducting medical affairs training, appointing
internal process auditors, creating a specialised in-house
department and investing in information technologies
security.
Out of the 17 companies not conducting clinical trials
in India, three companies are planning to conduct clinical
trials in India in future, in the coming three years.
The report concludes that the global harmonisation of
the regulatory framework and recent amendments to the
Patent Act and the regulatory approval for conducting
concurrent phase II and phase III trials reinforce the
government's commitment to create a favourable environment
for conducting clinical research in India.
December 29, 2005 |