| Literature DB >> 23526951 |
Esther S Pronker1, Tamar C Weenen, Harry Commandeur, Eric H J H M Claassen, Albertus D M E Osterhaus.
Abstract
To date, vaccination is the most cost-effective strategy to combat infectious diseases. Recently, a productivity gap affects the pharmaceutical industry. The productivity gap describes the situation whereby the invested resources within an industry do not match the expected product turn-over. While risk profiles (combining research and development timelines and transition rates) have been published for new chemical entities (NCE), little is documented on vaccine development. The objective is to calculate risk profiles for vaccines targeting human infectious diseases. A database was actively compiled to include all vaccine projects in development from 1998 to 2009 in the pre-clinical development phase, clinical trials phase I, II and III up to Market Registration. The average vaccine, taken from the preclinical phase, requires a development timeline of 10.71 years and has a market entry probability of 6%. Stratification by disease area reveals pandemic influenza vaccine targets as lucrative. Furthermore, vaccines targeting acute infectious diseases and prophylactic vaccines have shown to have a lower risk profile when compared to vaccines targeting chronic infections and therapeutic applications. In conclusion; these statistics apply to vaccines targeting human infectious diseases. Vaccines targeting cancer, allergy and autoimmune diseases require further analysis. Additionally, this paper does not address orphan vaccines targeting unmet medical needs, whether projects are in-licensed or self-originated and firm size and experience. Therefore, it remains to be investigated how these - and other - variables influence the vaccine risk profile. Although we find huge differences between the risk profiles for vaccine and NCE; vaccines outperform NCE when it comes to development timelines.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23526951 PMCID: PMC3603987 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0057755
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
In- and exclusion criteria for fine-tuning the dataset, inspired by [16].
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
| EMPHRA Code J7 = human vaccine product, prophylactic and therapeutic. | Vaccine product undergoing post-market clinical trials for additional indications |
| Vaccines target human infectious diseases caused by; viral, bacteria, fungi, parasites, bacterial toxins and unspecified infectious agents. | Vaccines targeting cancer, allergy and auto-immune indications. |
| The database entry has descriptive information on the product; sponsor company, therapeutic area, at least one date indicating the state of the current development phase | The vaccine product cannot be found on at least one other source.Except for products in PC or D phases, as these are underreported |
| Product is in the following phases according to the database; PC | Products in the following phases according to the database: M |
| Start of PC phase in 1998 | Duplicate entries |
Preclinical Phase;
Human clinical trials Phase One;
Human clinical trials Phase Two;
Human clinical trials Phase Three;
Regulatory submission to allow market entry;
Projects discontinued for any reason during any stage of the following stages of vaccine development in PC, PI, PII and PIII;
Market phase;
Post-marketing, also known as human clinical trials phase four;
No information available;
Failed or terminated vaccine products. In other words, products that have received regulatory market approval, but have been withdrawn from the market for any reason.
Figure 1Vaccine risk profiles for selected disease areas.
Risk profiles for the selected disease areas, combining phase duration with the cumulative transition probabilities as indicated by market entry probabilities. Rank order indicates quantity of projects in data set. Data points are labelled on the All Data curve; this labelling also applies to the other curves.
Table summarizing calculations of phase duration and transition probabilities for selected vaccine target disease areas.
| Disease Area | All Data | Pandemic Influenza | HIV/AIDS + | HBV | Anthrax ++ | Malaria + | JEV | ||||||||||
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| 1,50 | 1,89 | 1.73 | 1.27 | 0,07 | 1,57 | 0,14 | 2,86 | 0,02 | 2,00 | 0,05 | 1,18 | 0,14 | 2,32 | 0,05 | 0,51 | 0,17 |
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| 2,48 | 2,12 | 2.94 | 2.02 | 0,17 | 1,90 | 0,32 | 3,31 | 0,03 | 3,33 | 0,11 | 1,08 | 0,38 | 3,01 | 1,17 | 3,69 | 0,5 |
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| 2,86 | 2,45 | 3.39 | 2.32 | 0,21 | 1,50 | 0,50 | 4,24 | 0,07 | 6,61 | 0,25 | 4,20 | 0,75 | 2,82 | 1,17 | 2,45 | 0,5 |
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| 2,64 | 2,19 | 3.45 | 1.84 | 0,67 | 2,26 | 1,00 | 6,61 | 0,50 | 4,89 | 1,00 | - | - | 0,95 | - | 0,37 | 0,5 |
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| 1,24 | 0,79 | 1,58 | 0,89 | 0,85 | 1,32 | 0,92 | - | - | 1,03 | 0,50 | - | - | - | - | 0,85 | 1 |
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| 100 | 21,65 | 12,89 | 4,96 | 4,46 | 4,13 | 1,82 | ||||||||||
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| N.A. | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 13 | ||||||||||
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| 10,71 | 8,51 | 17,02 + | 17,86 | 6,44 ++ | 8,07 + | 7,87 | ||||||||||
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| N.A. | 1–5 Billion | 3,3 Million | 2 Billion | Uncommon | 3–500 Million | 50,000 | ||||||||||
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| N.A. | 116.000 | 91.120 | 15.600 | 30.700 | 350 | 77 | ||||||||||
+ Projects do not transition from clinical trial phase III to regulatory submission phase;
++ Projects do not transition from clinical trials phase II to clinical trial Phase III;
Standard deviation/year;
95% Confidence Interval for the mean duration/year;
Merger and acquisition, deals in US$ Million since 2004.
Figure 2Vaccine risk profile granulating acute versus chronic infections and prophylactic versus therapeutic vaccines.
Risk profiles for vaccines, granulated to show risk profiles for vaccines targeting acute versus chronic infections and prophylactic versus therapeutic vaccines. Groups are stratified from 100% of the data from the dataset. Percentage per group included.
Figure 3Combining the cumulative success rate with contextual factors.
Combining the cumulative success rate with the contextual factors of disease burden and size of investment (indicated by the size of the bubble).