"Priority medicines for Europe and the world" is a wake up call from WHO

February 18, 2005

Neglected diseases

Few readers of the BMJ were probably aware or even cared that the presidency of the EU Council was held by the Dutch government during the second six months of 2004. Nevertheless, history is likely to remember the Dutch presidency with gratitude. For in the run up to it, the Dutch government commissioned the World Health Organization to develop a research agenda for the European Union that was based on public health needs for priority medicines.

The commendable report was published last November.[1] Masterminded by Warren Kaplan and Richard Laing, and using a new approach, it is a work of scholarship. It covers a wide range of critical issues and makes many far reaching research proposals for the European Union. But underlying these extensive data and careful analyses are some chilling implications. Here are a few.

Firstly, contemporary notions of neglected diseases are far too circumscribed. They include both rare (orphan) diseases as well as common disorders (mainly communicable) of developing countries. But the neglected diseases also include a range of other conditions that are major burdens in all countries and for which we have few or no effective remedies. Epidemic influenza, appearing annually, probably causes a million deaths a year worldwide. But pandemic influenza, appearing every few decades, has much more devastating consequences. The pandemic of 1918-9, for example, killed an estimated 40-50 million people. Research into influenza, in relation to its catastrophic potential, is underfunded.[2] Worse still, we do not even seem able to provide sufficient vaccine to control epidemic influenza in the most developed countries. Little confidence exists that we could under-take a global immunisation programme for an influenza pandemic even if we had sufficient warning of its antigenic profile unless we can sharpen up on manufacture and distribution. Other notable examples of neglected diseases afflicting the world include antibacterial drug resistance, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, alcoholic liver disease, and stroke.

Secondly, the pharmaceutical industry is clearly unable to meet the needs of people with neglected diseases. This is not a criticism but a fact, for the pharmaceutical industry is a business and needs to provide its shareholders with a return on their investment. Many neglected diseases are unlikely to to do this and investment represents a great commercial risk. The industry will continue to play a major part in the discovery and development of drugs; but we need much greater pluralism in both the funding and discovery of novel treatments.

Examples of this pluralistic approach already exist. Substantial public funds for basic and clinical research, ultimately aimed at producing new forms of treatment, are available in the United States and to a lesser extent in Europe. The research agenda in the WHO report should be a major feature of the European Union's next research programme. For this we must rely on the influence of the Dutch presidency. But Europe also needs to harness the potential of public-private partnerships along the lines of the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development, or the Hereditary Disease Foundation in the United States.[3] Public-private partnerships involve joint investment of resources by bodies including universities, government supported research organisations, pharmaceutical companies, venture capitalists, and research based charities. The Hereditary Disease Foundation's public-private partnerships include, for example, not only the foundation itself but several pharmaceutical companies and academic researchers of the Huntington Study Group collectively seeking an effective treatment for Huntington's disease; and that of the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development is a joint initiative between the Rockefeller Foundation, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, WHO, a group of university based investigators, and several private companies.

Thirdly, the cost of developing a new drug must be reduced.[4] Unless savage cuts can be made in the current cost of bringing a new drug to the market-over $800m (#423m; 605m) and rising at the rate of 10% a year[5]-drug development will come to a standstill. Half this sum seems to be consumed by clinical development programmes. But real inroads need to be made into reducing all regulatory requirements if affordable new drugs are to be available to consumers.4 Promisingly, the problem has been acknowledged by both the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency,[6][7] but international action is needed if these difficulties are to be resolved. Radical regulatory reform that is acceptable to the United States, the European Union, and Japan will be essential to relieve our current woes. This will have to include reducing the burdens of preclinical studies and adopting innovative approaches to investigating efficacy and safety in patients.

Finally, the boundaries between primary and secondary prevention of disease clearly need to be redrawn. The silos currently occupied on the one hand by public health specialists and on the other by clinicians must be eroded. Prevention and control of disease need to go hand in hand. The transfer of the public health functions of the Health Development Agency to the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) as of April 2005 offers a real opportunity for this to happen-at least in England.[8]

Michael D Rawlins, professor
Wolfson Unit of Clinical Pharmacology, Medical School, University of Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne NE2 4HH (m.d.rawlins@ncl.ac.uk )
Competing interests: MR has been chairman of NICE since its formation in 1999.

References

1. Kaplan W, Laing R. Priority medicines for Europe and the world. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2004.(accessed 5 Nov 2004).

2. Treanor J. Weathering the influenza vaccine crisis. N Engl J Med 2004;351: 2037-40.[Free Full Text]

3. Moses H, Braunwald E, Martin JB, Their SO. Collaborating with industry-choices for the academic medical centre. N Engl J Med 2002;347: 1371-5.[Free Full Text]

4. Rawlins MD. Cutting the cost of drug development. Nature Rev Drug Discov 2004;3: 360-4.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]

5. DiMasi JA, Hansen RW, Grabowski HG. The price of innovation: new estimates of drug development costs. J Health Econ 2003;22: 151-85.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]

6. European Medicines Agency. The European Medicines Agency road map to 2010: preparing the ground for the future. London: European Agency for the Evaluation of Medicinal Products, 2004.

7. Food and Drugs Administration. Challenge and opportunity on the critical path to new medical products. Department of Health and Human Services: Washington DC. 2004.(accessed 6th Nov).

8. Department of Health. Report on the reconfiguration of the Department of Health's arm's length bodies. London: Department of Health, 2004. (accessed 6 Nov 2004).