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Opinion
All the access in China must be cut off
by
Nho, Byung Chul
Feb 11, 2020 06:30am
Professor Young-Bong Kim2019n-CoV is a RNA virus belonging to beta corona, similar to SARS or MERS, and is a common infectious disease with high mortality due to the absence of vaccines and treatments. The mortality rate of SARS and MERS was 10% and 30%, respectively. This is due to the level of medical care, and because it has very high gene homology with SARS and the same cellular receptor uses ACE2, it can be regarded as a second SARS virus. Viral disease, like a fire, early response is very important. The first thing you need to do when it is fire is to scream. That way, you should alert your surroundings so you don't miss an initial response. It's better to stay a bit more fuzzy than a big accident. Already, China failed to respond early, putting the entire region at risk, not just Hubei. Soon there will be more than 100,000 official infections, and already they have grown exponentially, but the diagnostic system will not follow them, and statistics will be missing. However, the death toll continues to rise, with exponential growth at some stages, and mortality is expected to be higher than now. 2019n-CoV is not a strong viruse when tested for virus inactivation. The virus is exactly the same as the cold epidemic of RNA viruses with temperature- and humidity-sensitive envelopes. The strength of the virus' propagation is important, but it's more affected by the environment. In other words, SARS inactivation test results show that at 4 ℃, the phenomenon is relatively stable in pH 3 or chemical disinfectant (formaldehyde based), etc., and this phenomenon is maintained until at least the end of March. Korea has experience of MERS in 2015, so the monitoring management system and the negative pressure isolation ward facility of the KCDC have been prepared. There is no infection in the hospital and the initial response is still good. This is also a reward for MERS. However, as new inflows continue and the second and third epidemics increase, the domestic virus disease response system is bound to reach its limit. Fortunately, even if it doesn't spread to serious pandemics, if the situation lasts until the end of March or April, people's fatigue and economic impact will be hard to say. The current diagnosis system cannot completely diagnose the carriers, so if we do not block the entry of infected people from China, we can become like other parts of China, so more preventive measures are required. It should be borne in mind that the last domestic MERS outbreak was caused by only one super infected person. The winter is a pleasant environment for viruses. No 2019n-CoV without a drug or vaccine can be prevented by justice and can only be solved by scientific protection.
Opinion
[Reporter’s View]Trust is essential to prevent a MERS II
by
Lee, Hye-Kyung
Feb 05, 2020 02:22am
As the fourth confirmed person in China's Wuhan Pneumonia (2019-nCoV Infection) emerges, there is growing concern over whether outbreak of the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) that occurred in 2015 could be reproduced. Beyond the concerns, people who have experienced the MERS crisis, as well as nursing institutions such as hospitals, clinics and pharmacies are terrified. On December 31, Wuhan in China, announced that 27 patients with unknown pneumonia (Wuhan pneumonia) were in quarantine treatment, the first death of Wuhan pneumonia occurred in China on January 10 this year. The incident occurred in China close to Korea, but until this time, people did not imagine that Wuhan pneumonia would become a concern of the whole nation as it was called 'SARS II' or 'MERS II'. The Korean people began to pay attention after January 20, when a Chinese woman (35) who entered Korea was confirmed as the first confirmation of Wuhan pneumonia. Until this time, Wuhan pneumonia was the 'item' covered in major daily newspapers, and there were very few articles on Wuhan pneumonia or new coronavirus in the professional journals. However, when the second confirmed person (male, 55) on the 24th, the third confirmed person (male, 54) on the 26th, and the fourth confirmed person (male, 55) on the 27th, all the media has been talking about Wuhan pneumonia or new coronavirus. It is a feeling that the 'MERS II' situation has been reproduced from the media. Five years ago, as a result of the MERS outbreak, as a journalist, I vowed to deliver prompt, accurate information to the public. In addition, I thought that the press should act as a 'bridgehead' to ensure that our government publishes the right information in the flood of false information, and that the people can trust the official announcement without disturbing the false information. This belief has not changed at all. The government is actively coping with Wuhan pneumonia faster than the MERS outbreak. The KCDC raised the warning level of infectious disease crisis from 'interest' to 'caution' after the first confirmation of Wuhan Pneumonia. The National Medical Center was designated as the 'new coronavirus infectious institution'. The Central Accident Prevention Division was set up by the Minister of Health and Welfare. Everything was done seven days after the first confirmation. People should work together to prevent the spread of Wuhan pneumonia by checking information on the outbreak trends and press releases through the website of the KCDC (http://www.cdc.go.kr/). Not only the trust of the people, the government, and the media, but also the efforts of medical professionals who are committed in the medical field are needed. On the 21st, the day after the announcement of the first confirmed patient in Korea, the Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service distributed information to medical institutions and asked for checking entrant information of the area where Wuhan pneumonia occurred through the Drug Safety Use Service (DUR). However, because the law does not enforce the use of DUR, some hospitals, clinics, and pharmacies have turned off the DUR program or have turned off the ITS(International Traveler Information System) program in the DUR. According to the HIRA, 30% of medical institutions do not use ITS. At this time, medical institutions should turn the ITS in the DUR system to 'ON' to receive information on the immigrants from Wuhan-pneumonia-infected areas and make efforts to prevent contact with them sooner. Five years ago, we overcame the MERS crisis while listening to the news of patients dying from MERS daily. According to experts, Wuhan pneumonia is likely to cause severe pneumonia, but there is no vaccine to treat. However, no deaths have occurred in Korea yet. This is because secondary infections are prevented by administering antiviral agents or antibiotics depending on the patient's condition. In the flood of information that is poured out every day, I hope that people will only select the right information and don’t forget 'hand washing' and 'masking', which are guidelines for preventing infectious diseases.
Opinion
[Reporter’s view]Dilemma of salesperson suicide & reporting
by
Eo, Yun-Ho
Feb 03, 2020 06:23am
Sad things happen constantly. In the past year, four salespeople who worked for a multinational pharmaceutical company took their own lives. This is the minimum number known and confirmed. The circumstances of the company and the extreme choices are different. However, the common point was that the reason for suicide was 'the company they worked for'. The reporting of suicides is tricky and uncomfortable for the media and journalists. The media needs to be cautious in reporting. Dailypharm also did not cover all four incidents. Even if reported, the first article is written with a level of communication that excludes interpretation and presumption. Nevertheless, the dilemma for the report itself remains. This is because of the heart of the bereaved family after the deceased. Of course, there are many cases where the bereaved family wants to be articled with appeal. Rather, the indifference of the press sometimes hurts them. On the other hand, but if they don't want their family to be exposed to someone they don't know about, or that someone around them might be able to guess the deceased, apart from the legitimacy of reporting, I think that ethical consideration is necessary. Certainly we shouldn't 'use' death badly, but if they have a 'reason' of extreme choice and a story they want to tell, we should listen to it. In addition, the media should add strength in raising awareness to prevent such tragic accidents from recurring. Suicide is linked to sorrow and interests. Confrontation between the union and the company intensifies, They continue to fight who is responsible for death. Even if the choice of the deceased was caused by performance pressure and staff reduction, it is another story to conclude this with the company's "imputation". So the press should be an observer. Based on the story of death, the media should listen to the labor and management's arguments and let them know that there are media that watch the fighting's conclusions and follow-up. Once again, I pray for the deceased's condolences and hope that suicide in the pharmaceutical industry will never happen again.
Opinion
[FOCUS] 10 ‘global new drugs’ promised 10 years ago
by
Chon, Seung-Hyun
Jan 15, 2020 06:28am
In 2011, the government formed Korea Drug Development Fund (KDDF) to provide inter-ministerial level support for developing new drug. Ministry of Science and ICT (MSIT), Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (MOTIE) and Ministry of Health and Welfare (MOHW) laid down a plan to develop more than ten global-level new drugs by investing on R&D together. The initial plan was to invest 1.6 trillion won for ten years until 2020 (530 billion won by the government, 530 billion won by private investment). According to the plan, Korea should be able to release ten new drugs by the end of this year. But it seems unrealistic at the moment. Considering Korea’s pharmaceutical and bio industry’s reality, the barrier of global market was too high. When Hanmi Pharmaceutical signed a series of giant license-out deals on investigational technology in 2015, the Korean pharmaceutical and bio industry was exhilarated. Everyone celebrated the advancement Korea has achieved in pharmaceutical and bio sector. But the excitement did not last long. For a long while, no other news of notable out licensing deals was reported. And when a few of licenses were returned to Hanmi Pharmaceutical, the industry’s rosy dream subsided. In fact, many were skeptical about the exaggerated expectation on the industry. Only then, more voices spoke out about keeping the head cool. In hindsight, more realized the Korean pharmaceutical and bio industry’s landscape has not been progressing, except for the exceptional performance by Hanmi Pharmaceutical. Since then, not only traditional pharmaceutical companies, but also bio ventures, such as Dong-A ST, Yuhan, SK Chemicals, SK Biopharmaceuticals, Legochem Biosciences, BridgeBio Pharma, Alteogen, and iNtRON Biotechnology, inked out licensing deals. Global pharmaceutical giants like AbbVie, Janssen, and Boehringer Ingel Heim shook hands with Korean companies. And Celltrion and Samsung Bioepis are now leading the global biosimilar market. Now the Korean industry is yet again dreaming on about drawing level with global pharmaceutical powerhouses. But the truth is we still have a long way to go. Last year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) cleared two new drugs by SK Biopharmaceuticals, but only five investigational drugs developed with Korean-made technology have passed the U.S. health authority so far. None of them reached the level, what would be viewed as ‘global commercialization success.’ Finished pharmaceutical product export in 2018 generated 3.40 trillion won, which was not even 20 percent of overall manufactured volume of 18.54 trillion won. Contrastingly, 4.89 trillion won of overseas finished products, significantly higher than the export, were imported in the same year. Finished product made in Korea used in Korea has gone down lower than the previous year to 75.6 percent. Some of Korean pipelines transferred to other global companies were dropped before reaching the commercialization stage. And in the near future, more out-licensed technologies are likely to be returned than successfully made into a finished product. Recent global drug development trend has more progressive new drugs proceeding faster than Korean pipelines. In some cases, technology development partner companies have lost interest in pursuing Korean companies’ pipeline with other similar candidate medicines available. Even worse, many Korean bio companies reported disappointing news of failed pipeline and clinical trials to their investors last year. Stock market was shaken by rumors spreading with mixed facts and hopes. Share price fluctuated from maximum to minimum limit for days. Obviously, it is possible for a Korean company to soon bring surprise news of making a big global success. But even so, it would mean outstanding performance of the company and not the whole Korean corporate R&D landscape’s. For last few years, Korean pharmaceutical and bio industry has experienced a series of trial and error. The ‘world’s first gene therapy’ turned out to have switched out active ingredient in production and its approval was revoked. Such ridiculous ‘trial and error’ should not be repeated again. Hopefully, this year would be the time for the industry to grow further based on the rough experiences. This year, probably, Korean companies would hear many stories of hopes and failures. And the entire industry should not be agitated or swayed by them. Instead of heightened anticipation, what we need is keeping it calm and moving forward.
Opinion
[Reporter’s View] At least a guideline for ‘class effect’
by
Eo, Yun-Ho
Jan 03, 2020 06:33am
‘Recognizing expected efficacy of drugs with same mechanism of action.’ It is definitely an unresolved conundrum. Experts have clashing opinions and each pharmaceutical company has different interests. In the end, what it comes down to is ‘case by case.’ Not that it needs an answer key, but obviously the prescribing doctor’s decision based on experience and medical knowledge is important. The problem is consistency in applying healthcare insurance reimbursement. For some classes, the effects are recognized regardless of the approved label and equivalent reimbursement criteria are applied, but some other classes have different scope of labels approved. Reimbursement expansion on combination therapy of sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT-2) inhibitor, currently pending without much of progress from 2018, would be a good example. As Korean Diabetes Association (KDA) failed to settle a dispute over expanding reimbursement on off-label anti-diabetic combination therapies including SGLT-2 inhibitor, dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitor and thiazolidinedione (TZD), the government that initially had intention to expand reimbursement on the off-label use, is now hesitant to take a further step. An odd phenomenon of the doctors opposing on expanding reimbursement is happening because of the dispute over class effect. Originally, it was the medical industry that started the discussion of providing reimbursement on anti-diabetic combination therapy. Apparently, doctors had experiences of confusion in prescribing as each drug in same class had different indications, and eventually had reduced reimbursement. In 2013, expanding reimbursement on combination therapy with DPP-4 inhibitor and TZD went through the same ordeal. However, the results were different. The medical industry valuing clinical evidence and expert’s judgment over approved label and financial impact was unprecedented as well. Class effects of DPP-4 inhibitor and SGLT-2 inhibitor, as stated by Korea’s reimbursement standard on orally taken anti-diabetic treatment, have been polarized so far. However, the possibility is still out there. Some expects positive outcome of a former professor at Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital, Yoon Kun-ho, elected as the president of KDA. The former professor used to actively demand for reimbursement on the combination therapy in 2013. We are talking about prescription drug. It doesn’t hurt to be careful. Some might say it better be rather careful. But, if their agenda is to recognize the class effect, then they should set a guideline on ‘required time for properly building up prescription experience, or prescription volume.’ There may be an expectation in the current situation, but there is no promise. If properties of disease are different, then a manual on class effect by each disease is essential. There is no need for the government to worry about the industry getting too confident about class effect and lazy on clinical trial. They know very well that abundant academic data is more powerful in the field than qualifying for reimbursement criteria.
Opinion
[Reporter’s View] Next year wishes for the industry
by
An, Kyung-Jin
Dec 30, 2019 09:47pm
“Last year, not one of Korean-made new drug was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Ever since hemophilia treatment Aftyla was passed in 2016, Korean drugs have not been able to get a green light from the U.S. health regulator for two consecutive years. However, the industry is expected to bring a series of good news this year about Korean drugs entering the U.S. market.” In the beginning for the year, Daily Pharm had opened an article with the lead. And as predicted, Korean pharmaceutical and bio companies had a year filled with good news. Starting from Yuhan closing a license-out deal with Gilead Sciences on candidate medicine for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), SK Biopharmaceuticals, OliX Pharmaceuticals, LegoChem Biosciences, Bridge Biotherapeutics, JW Pharmaceutical and Alteogen also scored license-out deals. Total nine license-out deals from January to November this year were closed by Korean pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies for 290 billion won. Also, other good news reported new pipelines developed with Korean-made technology have been approved in global markets. The U.S. FDA gave a nod respectively on treatment for excessive daytime sleepiness associated with narcolepsy, Sunosi (solriamfetol), and for partial-onset seizure, Xcopri (cenobamate) that SK Biopharmaceuticals licensed out to Jazz Pharmaceuticals. Led by botulinum toxin medicine Nabota developed by Daewoong Pharmaceutical, Samsung Bioepis and Celltrion’s biosimilars also had a notable achievement of grabbing foreign regulators’ approval this year. Although they were not first-in-class breakthrough drugs, Nabota and the biosimilars have been making profits from global markets in competition against other blockbuster drugs. Celltrion Healthcare has generated total of 800 billion won up to the third quarter with three biosimilars, Resima, Truxima and Herzuma. The volume surged by 60 percent from the same time last year. Samsung Bioepis selling three biosimilars—Benepali, Flixabi and Imraldi—in European market is expected to turn around for the first time in the year with accumulated net profit of 97.2 billion won up to the third quarter. Unfortunately, the industry had to endure a number of setbacks as well. Following the sales ban on Kolon Life Science’ Invossa, emerging biotechnology companies like Sillajen, Helixmith, and HLB Life Science released regretful news of failed clinical trials and left the public doubtful of the pharmaceutical and bio industry. Hanmi Pharmaceutical with the most aggressive R&D investment strategy in Korea had to give up on two R&D milestones from its license-out deal, whereas botulinum toxin companies like Medytox and Hugel stagnated with litigation over the source of strain and regulation on Chinese resellers. In contrast, the sluggish bio stocks growth having to turn around recently gave a hint of hope for next year. Investors are expecting the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference 2020 in January to be a catalyst to drive up the bio stocks. The J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference is the one of the world’s most renowned conferences for the bio sector. It has been reported major pharmaceutical and biosimilar companies from Korea, such as Hanmi Pharmaceutical, Yuhan, Daewoong Pharmaceutical, JW Pharmaceutical, Dong-A ST, Celltrion and Samsung Biologics, as well as other bio companies like Medytox, Hugel and ABL Bio are planning to participate in the event. Moreover, the industry predicts SK Biopharmaceuticals going public in the first half of next year would also boost investors’ confidence. Hopefully, Korean pharmaceutical and bio industry would achieve even more R&D milestones in year 2020.
Opinion
[FOCUS] There is no reliability of cluless government policy
by
Chon, Seung-Hyun
Dec 26, 2019 06:29am
The impurity issues that started in Valsartan last summer led to Ranitidine and Nizatidine, and many drug products were discontinued. This year, the domestic pharmaceutical industry suffered greatly due to impurity risk all year round. Using a stigma called "carcinogen", a huge amount of medicines were recovered, and pharmaceutical companies suffered huge losses. So far, the government's follow-up on impurity drugs has been a fear to pharmaceutical companies. From the Valsartan to Nizatidine, the pharmaceutical industry continued to report that the domestic measures were strong. Valsartan immediately suspended the sale of products using the company's drug substance when recalls were received in Europe. Since January 2015, the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety has stopped selling all drug products that used the ingredients in question. It has been criticized that losses have increased and confusion has increased as the problem-free products have been recovered. It has been concluded that impurity-containing Valsartan medicines are not harmful to humans in both Korea and the United States. In Korea, Ranitidine has been inspected for the collection of finished drugs and drug substances, and all products of Ranitidine have been suspended. Not all Ranitidine has been removed from abroad. In the United States and Europe, companies made their own recovery. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued an official statement last month stating that "the hazards of NDMA detected in Ranitidine are comparable to those exposed when eating roasted or smoked meat". 13 products of Nizatidine was discontinued. No products have been issued a recall order in the US and Europe. Mainly older products were classified as subjects of recovery, and pharmaceutical companies complained that they were forced to sacrifice while stopping the sale of trouble-free products. The MFDS is currently investigating the presence of impurities in Metformin. Singapore's Ministry of Health (HSA) recently retrieved 46 items of Metformin sold locally and recovered three. N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) was detected above the daily allowance. Unlike Valsartan, Ranitidine, and Nizatidine, Metformin investigations are cautious. The MFDS said they are investigating an Metformin, but has not yet conducted a collection test. The MFDS set out to conduct collection tests after Metformin's NDMA test was established this year. In this situation, the MFDS ordered pharmaceutical companies to submit data on the production of pharmaceuticals containing Metformin hydrochloride and the system of active drug substance investigation. Pharmaceutical companies are questioning whether “products using raw materials recovered from Singapore have been brought into the country”. Metformin's drug product recovered from Singapore has never been imported into Korea. However, the MFDS has not yet made an official position on whether the drug substance used in the product is imported into Korea. In the case of Valsartan, products that use the same raw material pharmaceuticals as those recovered as impurities from overseas must be discontinued in Korea. If it is confirmed that the same drug substance as Metformin recovered in Singapore is imported into Korea, it may be decided whether to discontinue the sale. In fact, it is reasonable to take follow-up measures through collection inspection even if the drug substance and the same manufactory that were recovered overseas are imported into Korea. It is reasonable to recover only the serial number in question even for the same product. This is a lesson already learned from the Valsartan issue. Rather, the bold policy to relieve the anxiety of the people encouraged anxiety. It caused a lot of social cost waste. It would be even more frustrating if they were reluctant to disclose transparent information because they were afraid of criticism that the MFDS would be in conflict with public insecurity or past policies. If they have experienced trial and error in the past, it is the government's role to honestly admit and implement an evolved policy. Then they should ask for understanding why it should have been. Only then they can gain trust. We want a "cool" government that can reflect on their mistakes.
Opinion
[Column] Self-injectable drug abuse, is SPD the answer?
by
Kim, Jung-Ju
Dec 17, 2019 01:40am
Self-injectable obesity treatment Saxenda has been under fire constantly, because the obesity treatment has been abused as a weight management injection generating not only safety concerns but also questionable profit for the interest group. Apparently, the government said it would provide answer to it in November. Some likely suggestions are individual unit packaging and separation of prescription and dispensing (SPD) system. Undue profit generated from abusing Saxenda? Demands for Saxenda has soared when the words got out that the injection is great option for controlling obesity. Accordingly, frequency of prescription and administration showed steep growth since then. However, it is questionable if the users in need of Saxenda are taking appropriate procedure to acquire the treatment at a moderate price. Before a medical profession makes a decision on the necessity of Saxenda administration and dose, user’s demand can make decisions first. As a result, inappropriate prescription of the injection raises concern of adverse reaction and safety. Other than the user’s demand, it also has been meddled with prescriber’s interest in profit. Abnormal amount of financial profit has been generated when prescribing and dispensing the injection, and such push in profitability has been pointed out as a reason for the abuse. Also it is problematic that some of the healthcare institutes and drug distributors are illegally supplying the treatment for the sake of financial gain. Besides making illegal profit, illegal supply of drug could bring serious safety issues. Is Saxenda abuse preventable? Plenty of reasons can be suggested for the abuse. But the user’s perception is the biggest reason. Drug users seeing Saxenda as a weight loss tool for esthetic purpose, rather than a health condition treatment, is one of the main reasons. And doctor’s perception is as problematic. The doctors are the ones to judge the necessity of the treatment use, and a drug prescription and frequency are decided by them as well. The doctor could be prescribing the treatment to the users to increase patient visit frequencies and profit. The user’s abuse can be shifted or prevented by educating and raising awareness of the risk. But doctors need more than a mere training and public service announcement; they need proper regulatory management. The health regulator could intervene doctors with insurance-covered medical service fee review, and pharmacist with the SPD system. Illegal drug supply can worsen the situation and its severity level. Countermeasure on illegal distribution is necessary not only to prevent drug abuse, but also to secure the order in distribution process and to stabilize medical expenditure in the National Health Insurance. Is SPD the answer to prevent self-injectable drug abuse? There are a number of suggestions to prevent drug abuse. Preventing and managing drug abusing by changing the perceptions of user and prescriber has limitations. This is why the regulatory management is needed. Besides the review procedure of insurance-covered medical service fee, the regulator could take account of SPD system as one of options for the regulatory management. The purpose of SPD system is to appropriately integrate economic feasibility and safety of drug use. Moderate use of drug consists of economic feasibility, safety and convenience. And it is the reason the injection was exempted from the SPD system. If an injection were to be dispensed at a pharmacy, the user would have to take it to a healthcare institute to get a shot. But self-injection is an exception and it can be shot either by a medical profession or the user themselves. However, the dual option of administration has become a loophole and it has created a side effect of drug abuse. Therefore, the regulator should positively consider applying SPD system on self-injectable items as well. The treatment was labeled ‘self-injectable’ for the sake of convenience, given the safety is guaranteed. To keep safety and economic feasibility from drug abuse, a handful of drug users should deal with inconvenience of administering the injection at a healthcare institute. The SPD system is not the only measure to prevent and manage self-injectable drug abuse. The government and insurer should endeavor to educate users and prescribers to change their drug use behaviors, while regulatory amendments on review and evaluation, and illegal distribution management are made, simultaneously. The interest group may additionally demand for increased dispensing fee and other means of compensation for SPD. But we should count on the interest groups to logically and reasonably handle the situation.
Opinion
[Reporter's view] Illegal Rebate CSO
by
Lee, Jeong-Hwan
Dec 11, 2019 06:40am
I suddenly thought that the trifoliate orange is innocent when I was covering the law revision extending medical and pharmacological expenditure reports to pharmaceutical CSOs. Pharmaceutical industry ethics management (CP) experts refer to CSOs based on drug expertise as tangerines, the CSO which was altered as an illegal rebate, as trifoliate orange Unlike tangerines that boil sweet and sour flesh, the trifoliate orange has a thick peel and a lot of seeds, so it has little flesh and a strong sour taste, making it suitable for comparing illegal CSOs. However, the pharmacological benefits of November’s trifoliate orange in season were excellent compared to the illegal CSO. Donguibogam (Principles and Practice of Eastern Medicine) says that the trifoliate orange is also effective for respiratory diseases and congestion such as relieving severe itching and detoxification of liver, relieving bloating and coughing. Even citric acid removes fat, which promotes nutrient metabolism in the body and helps with diet. Illegal CSOs, on the other hand, are all evil and no good to the health and pharmaceutical industry as well as to the health of normal CSO industries. The Korean version of Sunshine Act, launched from this year, is poised to expand the scope of application to pharmaceutical CSOs following pharmaceutical companies. It will be realized through the revision of the Pharmaceutical Affairs Law and the Medical Device Act, which contains the regulation on drug rebate, but it requires the efforts of the pharmaceutical industry and some altered CSOs. Korea's pharmaceutical industry, the future growth engine, is no longer able to stay in the generic drug structure. Generics that are already on the market and have expired major patents and poured out many of the same ingredients cannot lead the industry in the rapidly changing Fourth Industrial Revolution. It's been a long time since generics have lost their power as a cash cow, supporting the pharmaceutical industry and serving as a source of new drug research and development (R & D). There are numerous precedents that the generic fraudulent competition, which is hard to find market innovation, eventually leads to an illegal rebate war. Even in the case of generic competition, there is no argument against the need for a direction based on drug expertise through legitimate CSOs. The legislature and the Ministry of Health and Welfare soon agreed that they would embark on a complementary legislation that would include CSOs as drug companies in drug suppliers. This means a direct signal to the pharmaceutical industry and the CSO industry to initiate self-cleaning as a means of amending the law. The Welfare Ministry also believes that the revision of the law cannot be the magic bullet to eradicate all drug rebates. In the end, the rebate eradication can only be achieved if the pharmaceutical industry and the CSO themselves show their professionalism in the legal pharmaceutical competition market established by the government and the National Assembly, and then dig out the old and corrupt business. In addition to the yellow and coveted fruits, the trifoliate orange trees have been planted as a substitute for fences since ancient times, because of the stems of roses and oaks that are scary and thorny. Taking into account the medicinal efficacy and physical function of the trifoliate orange, which has been likened as an illegal CSO, we are dreaming of a future where the domestic CSO industry will grow into a strong and robust industry dedicated to pharmaceutical sales for medical and pharmacist experts.
Opinion
Both to blame of the rising Pharmaceuticals & Korea
by
Eo, Yun-Ho
Dec 05, 2019 06:16am
The pharmaceutical industry is a high value-added industry and Korea is now more interested in new drugs than ever before. As interest has increased, the names of pharmaceutical companies that have reported news such as clinical failures, discontinuations, or controversy about efficacy are very popular on the Internet. It is possible. Samsung and Celltrion's biosimilars are being recognized in the US and Europe, and the government is drawing blueprints for preferential treatment of new drug prices under the development policy of the pharmaceutical industry. But it should be clear. If success is easy, it is not a new drug in the first place. According to the analysis of 9,985 data performed or in progress by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for 10 years from 2006 to 2015, the success rate of the phase I was 63.2%, the phase II was 30.7%, the phase III is 58.1%. If we calculate this and estimate the probability that a new drug will be commercialized, it is only 9.6%. Stopping development and failing clinical trials are strange not to happen. However, there is a herd effect and both to blame. It is also true that many pharmaceutical companies aimed at a bandwagon effect like striking while the iron is hot. The clinical entry and completion data of the developed materials and indiscriminately presented data of the development materials, which are distributed indiscriminately without any explanation of what the drug is, aims only at investor psychology. 'Excellent efficacy compared to OOO drugs', 'It is the first XXX cancer drug', 'Secured cardiovascular safety’. It is attractive but shows no evidence. As a result of how many patients were studied and how long the study was conducted, it is not known how the difference was shown in terms of efficacy and safety compared to the comparison group. There is even a case where a comment from a company official called 'Good Medicine' is all about the medicine. story of domestic drug development is encouraging. It should be duly evaluated. This is no time to care of IR (Investor Relations). Shouldn't the stigma of playing with stocks be free itself from restraints of rebates?
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