<code id='ABDBA54B45'></code><style id='ABDBA54B45'></style>
    • <acronym id='ABDBA54B45'></acronym>
      <center id='ABDBA54B45'><center id='ABDBA54B45'><tfoot id='ABDBA54B45'></tfoot></center><abbr id='ABDBA54B45'><dir id='ABDBA54B45'><tfoot id='ABDBA54B45'></tfoot><noframes id='ABDBA54B45'>

    • <optgroup id='ABDBA54B45'><strike id='ABDBA54B45'><sup id='ABDBA54B45'></sup></strike><code id='ABDBA54B45'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='ABDBA54B45'><label id='ABDBA54B45'><select id='ABDBA54B45'><dt id='ABDBA54B45'><span id='ABDBA54B45'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='ABDBA54B45'></u>
          <i id='ABDBA54B45'><strike id='ABDBA54B45'><tt id='ABDBA54B45'><pre id='ABDBA54B45'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          hotspot

          hotspot

          author:comprehensive    Page View:47
          Tortoise and hare
          Medical devices have historically been seen as having faster paths to market than their pharmacological counterparts. The growing requirement for cost-effectiveness trials may be slowing them down. Jonathan Elderfield/AP

          When a colleague and I started our medical device company in 2009, we were in our second year at Harvard Medical School. Some classmates joked that they would still be in residency by the time we had moved on to our next big idea. We knew better — we expected it to be a long haul. Eight years into our journey, thousands of individuals have used our product in countries where it has been approved. But we have yet to gain approval in the U.S. — a long and expensive process.

          In 2016, the United States Food and Drug Administration approved 22 new drugs, down from 45 approvals in 2015. The decline in drug discovery has been attributed to a variety of factors that include ballooning research and development expenses (the cost to develop a new drug is now estimated to be more than $2.5 billion), high rates of failure (a whopping 90 percent of Phase 1 candidates never make it to launch), and the complexity of human biology, which can thwart even the most promising candidates.

          advertisement

          Medical devices have historically been viewed as having faster and lower-cost paths to market than their pharmacological counterparts: the average cost to develop high-risk, novel medical devices is estimated to be $94 million. After all, device engineers can leverage lower-cost animal models further into development than their pharmaceutical colleagues, the human clinical trials necessary for FDA approval are often smaller in scale, and, in some cases, expenses can be defrayed by revenue generated outside the United States in markets with faster regulatory pathways.

          Unlock this article by subscribing to STAT+ and enjoy your first 30 days free!

          GET STARTED Log In

          explore

          The high cost of giving birth even with insurance
          The high cost of giving birth even with insurance

          AdobeTheburdenofhighhealthcarecostsandmedicaldebtintheU.S.isnosecret.Medicaldebtaffectsoneinfiveadul

          read more
          Doctors in states that ban abortion can still help patients
          Doctors in states that ban abortion can still help patients

          ANGELAWEISS/AFPviaGettyImagesFornow,abortionremainsaccessibleeveninstateswhereit’sbanned—atleastfort

          read more
          Hepatitis C has a cure — but many Americans still lack access to it
          Hepatitis C has a cure — but many Americans still lack access to it

          AdobeIn2005,NickVoyleswasdiagnosedwithhepatitisCafterbeingreleasedfromfiveyearsofincarceration.Anurs

          read more

          Fentanyl is making it harder to start addiction treatment

          PacketsofbuprenorphineEliseAmendola/APDoctorsarereportingatroublingtrendwhenitcomestofentanyl.Thepow