Superbug review urges Big
Pharma to 'pay or play' on antibiotics
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[May 19, 2016]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON, (Reuters) - Drug companies should
agree to "pay or play" in the urgent race to develop new antibiotics to
tackle a global threat of antimicrobial resistance (AMR), according to a
British government-commissioned review.
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Led by former Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O'Neill, the review
said every sector affected by the growing threat of superbug
infections - from patients, to doctors, to governments, to the
healthcare industry - must be forced "out of its comfort zone" if
the issue is to be successfully tackled
This should include pharmaceutical companies, O'Neill said, which
should be subject to a surcharge if they decide not to invest in
research and development (R&D) to bring successful new antibiotic
medicines to market.
For who do decide to "play", he said, a reward of between $1 billion
and $1.5 billion should be paid for any successful new antimicrobial
medicine brought to market.
"If we don't do something, we're heading towards a world where there
will be no antibiotics available to treat people who need them,"
O'Neill told reporters at a London briefing as he presented a final
report from his team's 18-month review.
He repeated the review's previous estimation that AMR could kill an
extra 10 million people a year and cost up to $100 trillion by 2050
if it is not brought under control. [
Any use of antibiotics promotes the development and spread of
superbugs - multi-drug-resistant infections that evade the
antimicrobial and antibiotic drugs designed to kill them.
O'Neill was asked last year by Britain's Prime Minister David
Cameron to conduct a full review of the problem and suggest ways to
combat it.
Launching his final report, O'Neill said it had identified 10 areas
where the world needs to take action. Some of these focus on how to
reduce unnecessary use of antibiotics, while others look at how to
increase the supply of new ones.
"Our arsenal to defeat superbugs is running out and needs to be
replenished," the review said.
COSTS OF ACTION, AND INACTION
O'Neill's review called for a group of countries such as the G20 to
reward companies for finding and developing new antibiotics.
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"These market entry rewards, of around $1 billion each, would be
given to the developers of successful new drugs, subject to certain
conditions that ensure they are not over-marketed but are available
to patients who need them wherever they live," it said.
O'Neill said the review's proposals would cost up to $40 billion
over 10 years - a figure "dwarfed by the costs of inaction". A
little more than half of that - up to $25 billion - should probably
come from the drugs industry, he said.
He suggested several possible funding sources, including allocating
a small percentage of G20 countries’ health spending, reallocating a
fraction of global funding from international institutions, applying
a "pay or play" antibiotic investment charge on drug companies who
don't invest in antimicrobial research and taxing current antibiotic
use.
"Given the systemic risk to the pharmaceutical industry, the sector
could contribute to supporting market entry rewards - on a pay or
play basis," he told reporters.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland)
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