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New Drug Development Process
Steps from Test Tube to New Drug Application Review
The fully capitalized cost to develop a new biotechnology drug, including studies conducted
after receiving regulatory approval, averages $1.2 billion, according to an analysis
by the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development (2006). The Tufts Center study was based on compound-specific
costs for a sample of 17 investigational biopharmaceuticals from four firms that first entered clinical testing
from 1990 to 2003. Notably, only five in 5,000 compounds that enter preclinical testing make it to
human testing, and only one of the five tested in people is approved by the Food & Drug Administration (FDA).
The average time for the FDA to approve new drugs declined to 1.1 years in the 2005-07 period,
but longer average clinical phase time means combined clinical and approval time continues to
hover around eight years. The Tufts Center maintains unique
databases that provide the most detailed source of historical information available on pharmaceutical and
biopharmaceutical innovation in the United States. These databases contain data on products approved from 1963 to the present
(Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development).
Click any of the
following boxes or words
Source: U.S. Food and Drug Administration Center for Drug Evaluation and Research Handbook.
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