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2021 Access to Medicine Index: no profit, no pharma? | Science| In-depth reporting on science and technology | DW

Healthy by Healthy
January 26, 2021
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2021 Access to Medicine Index: no profit, no pharma? | Science| In-depth reporting on science and technology | DW
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Pharmaceutical companies “continue to inch forward” to improve access to medicines in poorer countries, says a report published by the Access to Medicine Foundation on Tuesday (January 26, 2021).

The Netherlands-based non-profit organisation says there is progress, but progress is slow. And profit appears still to be the main driver for research and development (R&D) in medicines and vaccines.

In the foundation’s 2021 ranking of the pharmaceutical industry,  it says that most of the products approved since 2018 have targeted “more profitable non-communicable diseases [than less profitable] communicable diseases.”

It continues: “The 2021 analysis showed that only two recently approved products target neglected tropical diseases (NTDs).”

And on COVID-19, the “industry only mobilized once it became clear that the outbreak affected rich as well as poor countries,” because that opened up the potential for “substantial recurring pharmaceutical revenues.”

Infografik - 2021 Access to Medicine Index: Top Ten - EN

“The state of infectious disease research today is, if I can put it mildly, on thin ice,” said Dr. Jayasree Iyer, executive director of the Access to Medicine Foundation, in an interview with DW.

“It’s heavily reliant on public funds and the goodwill of a few pharmaceutical companies. Many companies have actually left infectious disease R&D,” says Iyer.

“But when we talk about the scale of some of these issues and the knowledge to develop a product, to produce it at scale, efficiently, and deploy it in countries, the world relies on the pharmaceutical industry,” she says.

The industry might also argue that it needs recurring revenues in order to be able to respond to public health emergencies, such as a pandemic.

Conditions that get the most attention

Access to Medicine’s Index ranks pharmaceutical companies on what they are doing to improve access to their medicines — their products — in poorer countries.

The ranking uses three main criteria: Governance of Access, Research and Development, and Product Delivery.

Our graph focuses on the top ten companies in the ranking of 20.

GlaxoSmithKline has held onto the top position since the last Access to Medicine Index was published in 2018. Pfizer has entered the top five.

Non-communicable diseases, such as cancers, continue to dominate R&D at the top companies. Cancers account for more than two thirds of all projects. 

Among the infectious diseases, HIV and AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria continue to receive the most attention from companies, with COVID-19 joining them in 2020.

Research into maternal and neonatal health conditions increased, but “only slightly,” says an accompanying report. That was by 1% of all R&D projects.

Less action on neglected tropical diseases

Access for Medicine says there has been “notable progress” in planning during R&D to make future products accessible.

“Eight companies are developing approaches for systematically ensuring all R&D projects are paired with plans to increase access in poorer countries soon after launch,” write the report authors.

But projects targeting neglected tropical diseases have decreased from 90 to 86.

A medical worker extracts a Guinea worm from a child's leg in Ghana

Dracunculiasis, or guinea-worm disease, is contracted by drinking contaminated water

NTDs include dengue, rabies, trachoma, yaws and guinea-worm disease. The latter two have been identified as candidates for disease eradication or disease control.

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There are other diseases, such as Ebola, of which there have been a number of recent outbreaks in western Africa.

Those outbreaks, says Iyer, have provided a platform for renewed interest in Ebola, but that that interest needs to be maintained and prioritised.

“The more disease priorities are well-defined, the easier it is to engage industry,” says Iyer. “And the greater the public funding, and assistance to deploy [medicines], the likelier it is that we see a group of companies engaging on particular issues.”

That can also come as a result of public sentiment through awareness campaigns and activism, says Iyer. That has been seen with HIV, for instance. 

Planning for the next pandemic

Access to Medicine’s findings also show so-called “empty pipelines” for 10 out of 16 of the emerging infectious diseases in the world, says Iyer. Basically, nothing’s happening there — no research, no development.

One such example, says Iyer, is Nipah, an infectious disease that transmits from animals to humans, a “zoonotic” virus.

It has been found in Asia, Southeast Asia and Africa, with recent outbreaks affecting Malaysia, Singapore, Bangladesh, India and Thailand. And there is no vaccine.

“Large research-based pharmaceutical companies have a critical role to play in preparing for the next pandemic,” write the report authors. “The lag in access planning, despite hefty public funding for much R&D, suggests that pharmaceutical companies must do more.”

That includes, say the report authors, demonstrating a sustained commitment to invest more in emerging infectious disease R&D, embedding equitable distribution into their strategies, and showing greater flexibility on sharing intellectual property.

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