TY - JOUR
T1 - Big Pharma, little science? A bibliometric perspective on big pharma's R&D decline
AU - Rafols, Ismael
AU - Hopkins, Michael M.
AU - Hoekman, Jarno
AU - Siepel, Josh
AU - O'Hare, Alice
AU - Perianes-Rodriguez, Antonio
AU - Nightingale, Paul
PY - 2013/6/1
Y1 - 2013/6/1
N2 - There is a widespread perception that pharmaceutical R&D is facing a
productivity crisis characterised by stagnation in the numbers of new
drug approvals in the face of increasing R&D costs. This study
explores pharmaceutical R&D dynamics by examining the publication
activities of all R&D laboratories of the major European and US
pharmaceutical firms during the period 1995-2009. The empirical findings
present an industry in transformation.In the first place, we observe a
decline of the total number of publications by large firms. Second, we
show a relative increase of their external collaborations suggesting a
tendency to outsource, and a diversification of the disciplinary base,
in particular towards computation, health services and more clinical
approaches. Also evident is a more pronounced decline in publications by
both R&D laboratories located in Europe and by firms with European
headquarters. Finally, while publications by Big Pharma in emerging
economies sharply increase, they remain extremely low compared with
those in developed countries. In summary, the trend in this
transformation is one of a gradual decrease in internal research efforts
and increasing reliance on external research. These empirical insights
support the view that large pharmaceutical firms are increasingly
becoming networks integrators rather than the prime locus of drug
discovery.
AB - There is a widespread perception that pharmaceutical R&D is facing a
productivity crisis characterised by stagnation in the numbers of new
drug approvals in the face of increasing R&D costs. This study
explores pharmaceutical R&D dynamics by examining the publication
activities of all R&D laboratories of the major European and US
pharmaceutical firms during the period 1995-2009. The empirical findings
present an industry in transformation.In the first place, we observe a
decline of the total number of publications by large firms. Second, we
show a relative increase of their external collaborations suggesting a
tendency to outsource, and a diversification of the disciplinary base,
in particular towards computation, health services and more clinical
approaches. Also evident is a more pronounced decline in publications by
both R&D laboratories located in Europe and by firms with European
headquarters. Finally, while publications by Big Pharma in emerging
economies sharply increase, they remain extremely low compared with
those in developed countries. In summary, the trend in this
transformation is one of a gradual decrease in internal research efforts
and increasing reliance on external research. These empirical insights
support the view that large pharmaceutical firms are increasingly
becoming networks integrators rather than the prime locus of drug
discovery.
KW - Computer Science - Digital Libraries
KW - Physics - Physics and Society
U2 - 10.1016/j.techfore.2012.06.007
DO - 10.1016/j.techfore.2012.06.007
M3 - Article
VL - 1306
SP - 947
JO - arXiv.org
JF - arXiv.org
ER -