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UK Chemical Industries’ Lessons From the Recession

Dr John Saul, past President of the British Chemical Industries Association on Issues For a Sustainable Future of the Sector

Dr John SaulApril 2011. The chemicals industry in the UK his coming out of some quite difficult times. How sustainable is recovery? In the exclusive interview with B2Bioworld Dr John Saul, past President of CIA provides an outlook on the future of the UK chemicals industry leveraging British Pound, US Dollar and Euro, while seeking opportunities within the UK, in the EU, and emerging countries. Demanding tasks lie ahead. While pharma is the draught horse of the UK chemicals industry, how competitive is the rest of it on a global scale? What is the strategy to reduce dependency on fossil energies and in which ways does it account for nuclear or renewable ones? How is REACH regulations viewed from within the country? Last not least, what are prospects that policy makers coherently attend to industry interests given a rather fragmented scene of lobbying organisations and preferences for the finance and banking sector?

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Bayer U.S. Innovation Center starts its operations in Mission Bay

January 11, 2011. The U.S. Innovation Center of Bayer HealthCare’s pharmaceutical division has started its operations in San Francisco’s Mission Bay life sciences hub. At the same time the company announced a master agreement for research collaborations with the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). "Bayer chose San Francisco as the site for its U.S. Innovation Center because of the leading role this area’s research community plays in life science discovery,” said Andreas Fibig, chairman of the board of management of Bayer Schering Pharma AG, Germany. “The master agreement with UCSF sets the stage for a long and successful public-private partnership which builds our pipeline and brings novel medicines to patients.”

 

Bayer is expanding its collaborative relationships with academic and life sciences firms in California and in other major scientific networks in the U.S. through a dedicated team of scientists at the U.S. Innovation Center. The “Science Hub” team is charged with identifying and facilitating collaborations in the areas of Bayer HealthCare’s research focus Oncology, Cardiology and Hematology, Women’s Healthcare, Diagnostic Imaging, and beyond. "Master agreements like this help smooth the path for innovative research projects that translate academic research into improved patient care,” said UCSF Chancellor Susan Desmond-Hellmann, MD, MPH. “This agreement will help researchers at Bayer and UCSF collaborate on a broad range of projects to that end.” The U.S. Innovation Center also houses scientists who drive Bayer’s hematology research program focused on coagulation factors and the discovery of novel biologic drug candidates. A 65-member research team is currently working at the Innovation Center. Bayer’s U.S. Innovation Center is located at 455 Mission Bay Boulevard South. Bayer will occupy approximately 49,000 square feet of leased lab and administrative space. By locating the Innovation Center in Mission Bay, Bayer’s scientists are in the heart of a growing biomedical research community and in state-of-the-art labs.

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Related Editorial Article

 

Bayer AG: New Stakes in Stem Cells
Interview with Andreas Busch, Member of Bayer Healthcare, responsible for Global Drug Discovery

 

Pharma Getting Down to Business with Stem Cells

Editorial by Wolf G Kroner

Winds of change are blowing through the corridors of many pharma companies as executives develop more concrete ideas to optimise stem cell technologies in terms of efficiency and responsible use. As one would expect, the first to profit are those in the industry itself capable of delivering solid results rather than promises and hopes for the future. More surprising is that patients are also reaping benefits from these changes, at least those who belong to patient organisations. It is not ‘biotech’ per se, as one might assume, but differences being introduced into pharma leadership. That and the use of methods and analytical instrumentation able to reflect the trajectory of stem cells.

 

  In June 2005 Roger Perlmutter, CSO of Amgen, told the Financial Times about plans to enter into “business with stem cells”. Interestingly, his answers were not the usual honed and polished product of a corporate communications department, but delivered ‘straight from the hip’, so to speak, in direct response to the journalist’s questions. His message has broad appeal, and remains so more than four years on, despite the ubiquity of commercial research and stem cell products that began to emerge a decade or so ago. The viability of the science is underlined when one counts the number of pharma executives either taking major investment decisions in the field, or actually sitting on the boards of biotech companies dedicated to stem cell research.

 

  So, back to Amgen and the FT. In the interview, Perlmutter repeated what was already known at the time. In addition, he was especially careful to repeat the standard industry statement that Amgen is not interested in any commercial uses of “embryonic stem cells”. But he may not have been careful enough. Insiders report that Perlmutter came under fire back at the office for voicing outspoken views on strategy in such a public forum. What is certain is that his message did not align with that of corporate communications.

 

  In 2007, BioWorld Europe*, a print magazine for life science professionals, (note, not the general public) launched a survey among pharma companies and their evaluation of available stem cell technologies, their shortcomings, and recommendations to overcome these weaknesses. At the time, there was a growing malaise among industry scientists doing lab work on stem cells. Major science journals introduced ethical debates in their technical sections – not seen often but necessary in order to capture the public mood. Patenting issues were contaminated by politics, especially in continental Europe – in particular France and Germany, somewhat less in Sweden, and even more muted in the UK.

 

Pipettes Stem Cell Laboratory

  It would be normal for industry scientists working in the field to attend scientific stem cell conferences. So far, so good. But what most found irritating was a feeling that they were being ‘muzzled’ by their companies during these conference visits. As editor of BioWorld Europe I attended BIO in Boston - the US pharma industry’s largest partnering event for biotech - in order to meet business developers for and corporate spokespersons of big players such as Genentech, Pfizer, and Amgen. Now, BioWorld Europe was not FT, and has limited appeal other than marketing for the average US pharma company. However, even a European-based trade magazine can expect some positive response to requests for interviews. Sadly not. I began to realise what Dr. Perlmutter must have felt after returning to the office after his much-discussed FT interview. The industry scientists I spoke to informed me about their companies’ upgraded communications policies regarding in-house stem cell projects when talking to the outside world. Depending on the company, reactions range from failure to respond, to delays and subsequent abandonment, to ridicule – even lies. Of course, such a ‘head-in-the-sand’ approach is counter-productive when it comes to building trust, open innovation, or what Pfizer’s Jeffrey Kindler calls a “scientific powerhouse”. It introduces a cynical world view, both among employees and observers outside company. Let’s take another look at the FT interview. Even before the article was written, Amgen had not only externalised stem cell research to hospitals, universities and biotech firms such as Stem Cells Inc. and Viacell, they were also working in-house with (mice) embryonic stem cells – developments which the FT reporter did not pursue and about which Dr Perlmutter kept silent in the interview.

 

  There is a myriad professional bodies, industry organisations and scientific societies who rely on the silence of pharmaceutical companies when it comes to discussing R&D, despite the temptation felt among all scientists to discuss their work among a wider professional audience. It must be remembered that these professional bodies have their own agenda separate from, and sometimes in opposition to, the individual needs of their members. Thus, debates about stem cell technologies are often reduced to chatter about how to acquire public research funds, or a means for political manoeuvring. If we accept the overall goal of speeding up technology development and the need for reasoned and intelligent advocacy, the result of all these diversionary tactics is that they let the more important questions fall by the wayside. Such as: How do we properly finance the translation of stem cell discoveries into safe and valuable therapies? How do we develop modern and appropriate regulations to govern clinical use of stem cells, that will give greater certainty to investors? And, moving beyond ethical guidelines and clinical trials development issues: what technical standards need to be followed in order to validate toxicity testing with stem cells? What is the scope of a single discovery? or: Does a successful lab experiment with stem cells entitle the researcher to publicise the discovery by suggesting a novel ‘therapeutic’ has been ‘discovered’, even though the normal requirements of independent confirmation, upscaled studies, expanded clinical data collection and regulatory approval have still to even be considered?


Monitoring Lab ExperimentsIt is true that any responsible application of these technologies has to be governed by consensus within society (e.g. on the ethical framework) and also legitimate political decision-making (e.g. leading to regulations), but it is equally true that scientific and medical research needs guidance in where to direct basic research (which need not contradict the norms of disinterested and curiosity-driven research!). Biotech suppliers and tool developers need guidance from pharma companies and other major customers on standards necessary once development leaves the research labs or when funding by the tax payer runs out. And this in turn requires a more forward-thinking attitude on the part of pharmaceutical companies, and a preparedness to invest in internal infrastructure, at least those interested in growing advanced therapy businesses. Even a vertically-integrated pharmaceutical company is unable to call all shots, if only because of the high risks of failure which go hand-in-hand with medicines research. A topical example comes from Genzyme on how this successfully works for employment security, profit generation and patient benefits. Another example are autonomous patient organisations like Association Française des Myopathies which operates basic research (like I-Stem), runs technology centres, establishes biotech companies, invests into pilot plants to manufacture (orphan) drugs, and supplies academic advisors to national regulatory bodies as well as EMEA.

 

  B2Bioworld is to contribute to the debate about growing ‘the business of stem cells’. B2Bioworld is proud to offer to our readers an edition, wherein pharma leaders of eight of the worldwide largest and most innovative companies of the industry share their experiences and views together with scientists, industry consultants and patent lawyers. Enjoy reading..

 

Notes

 

* BioWorld Europe (2007): Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cells.Edited by Wolf G Kroner, Editor and Founder of Biworld Europe.

 

** In this and upcoming issues B2Bioworld will publish further details about some of these companies. In 2005, and well ahead of others, GE Healthcare (including former Amersham in the UK and Pharmacia in Sweden) published a position statement on their understanding and approach to use stem cells (www.gehealthcare.com/company/position_statements/stemcell6_05.html). Make no mistake: this is no press release or cosmetic platitude. It is no less than an element of leadership, directed towards internal change, as well as a bold statement to the outside world this is a learning organisation. Content may be debated, but this statement from GE Healthcare stands out as a proactive landmark, a claim that they aren't afraid to deal with these issues and encourage their employees to help them critically evaluate stem cell technologies.

Preparing for Another Level of Innovation

Dr Mark FishmanHow does Novartis use stem cell patents? How does it view peers like Pfizer engaging in this field? Interview with Dr Mark Fishman, President of the Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research and Member of the Executive Committee of Novartis, February 2009.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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Novartis: Adhering to Values Pays off

Novartis continues to expand the biotech therapeutics pipeline / Focus on emerging markets

Dr. Daniel Vasella28-01-2009. Presenting financial results 2008 Novartis’ management board outlines its strategy, and comments on competitors. Largely overlooked are the donation programs and its impact on the firm and emerging pharmaceutical markets.

 

 

 

 

 

 



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