Literature DB >> 23685094

CNS drug development in Europe--past progress and future challenges.

David J Nutt1, Jim Attridge.   

Abstract

Despite enormous progress in defining, diagnosing and treating mental disorders, EU health systems face a mounting challenge in responding to 'unmet need'. Mental illnesses produce a societal burden that exceeds that for either cancers or cardiovascular conditions. Leveraging advances in science and medicine to make available new innovative medicines is a key component in responding to this challenge. The dominant paradigm has been, is and will continue to be, one of incremental progress. Better medicines for depression, anxiety and psychoses in the working age population would add great value to patients and improve labour productivity. But psychotropic medicines face exceptional challenges in demonstrating their added value, due to uncertainty in patient diagnosis, selecting treatments and ensuring adherence. Also, there are major difficulties in estimating costs. Advances in understanding brain processes, identifying biomarkers and neuro-imaging techniques promise far more effective 'diagnostic-therapeutic' treatments and improved patient outcomes in the future. Currently there are valuable incremental innovations in late development, which may well fail to recover their R&D costs, because of very low reimbursed prices. This will send a signal to innovators not to persist with product development in this area. Recently several leading companies have withdrawn from R&D in these mental disorders. This is a worrying development since building the capabilities to succeed in any disease sector takes many years and, once dismantled, they cannot easily be re-established. Three policy interventions could improve innovation incentives: Further 'push' incentives under i) and streamlining under ii) alone will not reverse the decline in investment incentives. An EU consensus, based upon an innovation model which encompasses the Research, Development and Market phases as a single cyclical process, which addresses the weak 'market pull incentives' under iii) is needed. There is a very real risk that without such an integrated approach to policy reforms, innovation in psychotropic medicines will become a 'desert' in the same way that it did for antibiotics in the 1990's.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Drug development; Europe; Innovation incentives

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23685094     DOI: 10.1016/j.nbd.2013.05.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurobiol Dis        ISSN: 0969-9961            Impact factor:   5.996


  6 in total

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Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  2019-02-25       Impact factor: 7.446

Review 2.  Single-Cell RNA Sequencing: Unraveling the Brain One Cell at a Time.

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Review 3.  Proceedings of the 2013 CINP summit: innovative partnerships to accelerate CNS drug discovery for improved patient care.

Authors:  Anthony George Phillips; Peter Hongaard-Andersen; Richard A Moscicki; Barbara Sahakian; Rémi Quirion; K Ranga Rama Krishnan; Tim Race
Journal:  Int J Neuropsychopharmacol       Date:  2014-12-25       Impact factor: 5.176

Review 4.  Addressing the challenge of high-priced prescription drugs in the era of precision medicine: A systematic review of drug life cycles, therapeutic drug markets and regulatory frameworks.

Authors:  Toon van der Gronde; Carin A Uyl-de Groot; Toine Pieters
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-08-16       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 5.  Depressive disorders: Treatment failures and poor prognosis over the last 50 years.

Authors:  Thomas P Blackburn
Journal:  Pharmacol Res Perspect       Date:  2019-05-03

6.  Effects of haloperidol inhalation on MK-801- and memantine-induced locomotion in mice.

Authors:  Hiroshi Ueno; Shunsuke Suemitsu; Shinji Murakami; Naoya Kitamura; Kenta Wani; Yu Takahashi; Yosuke Matsumoto; Motoi Okamoto; Takeshi Ishihara
Journal:  Libyan J Med       Date:  2020-12       Impact factor: 1.657

  6 in total

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