China
drug approval backlog jumped by a third last year
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[March 13, 2015]
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China had more
than 18,500 drugs waiting for approval at the end of 2014, up by a third
from a year before, the official Center for Drug Evaluation said on
Friday, reflecting industry concern that it is getting harder to get
medicines approved in the China market.
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Drug company executives say China has toughened the approval
process, with companies forced to go through six to eight-year wait
times in the world's second biggest pharmaceutical market, where
spending is set to hit as much as $185 billion by 2018, according to
IMS Health.
China's fast-growing healthcare market is a magnet for drugmakers,
medical device firms and hospital operators, with a broader
healthcare bill set to hit $1 trillion by 2020. However, the sector
is riddled with issues from rampant bribery to huge divides between
urban and rural care.
China's drug trial center received 8,868 drug applications in 2014,
up from 7,610 the year before, according to the annual report Center
for Drug Evaluation, overseen by the country's food and drug
regulator, and released on Friday.
The organization said it had increased the number of reviews it
completed last year, but it was outflanked by an increase in new
drugs to review.
"This has further increased the backlog of pending tasks," it said.
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China's healthcare sector has been en vogue of late with investors
and dealmakers. Deals in the sector doubled to $18.5 billion last
year, Thomson Reuters data showed, with the speed of growth
accelerating even further at the start of this year.
(Reporting by SHANGHAI newsroom; Writing by Adam Jourdan; Editing by
Robert Birsel)
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