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Economic Value: Medical Progress

Keywords

war-on-disease, 1-percent-treaty, medical-research, public-health, peace-dividend, decentralized-trials, dfda, dih, victory-bonds, health-economics, cost-benefit-analysis, clinical-trials, drug-development, regulatory-reform, military-spending, peace-economics, decentralized-governance, wishocracy, blockchain-governance, impact-investing

Estimating the Economic Value of Accelerating Medical Progress Through New Therapies

Introduction

Understanding the economic value of new therapies is essential for evaluating the impact of accelerating medical progress. This article explores:

  • The average economic value of a new therapy.
  • The total annual value based on the average number of new therapies approved each year.
  • An estimation of the potential value created by increasing trial capacity by 12.3x (95% CI: 4.19x-61.3x).

A conceptual infographic illustrating the progression from the economic value of a single therapy to total annual value and the projected impact of a 12.3-fold increase in trial capacity.

A conceptual infographic illustrating the progression from the economic value of a single therapy to total annual value and the projected impact of a 12.3-fold increase in trial capacity.

Average Economic Value of a New Therapy

The value of a new therapy can be assessed through market performance and societal benefits:

  • Market Valuation: Research estimates the average value of a successful new drug at $1.62 billion.
  • Development Costs: Drug development costs range from $314 million to $4.46 billion depending on therapeutic area and clinical complexity.

A comparison of the average market valuation for a new drug versus the broad range of potential development costs.

A comparison of the average market valuation for a new drug versus the broad range of potential development costs.

Annual Value Based on Average Approvals

A visual breakdown of the annual economic value calculation, illustrating the relationship between 50 yearly drug approvals and the resulting 81 billion in total value.

A visual breakdown of the annual economic value calculation, illustrating the relationship between 50 yearly drug approvals and the resulting 81 billion in total value.

Impact of 12.3x (95% CI: 4.19x-61.3x) More Trial Capacity

What would happen with 12.3x (95% CI: 4.19x-61.3x) more trial capacity to test treatments simultaneously?

A visual comparison showing the current baseline of 50 new drug approvals per year versus a massive projected increase resulting from 12.3 times more trial capacity.

A visual comparison showing the current baseline of 50 new drug approvals per year versus a massive projected increase resulting from 12.3 times more trial capacity.

Considerations and Context

  • Market Saturation: Rapid introduction of therapies could lead to price competition and reduced per-drug economic value.
  • Healthcare System Capacity: The healthcare infrastructure would need substantial scaling to manage increased development and distribution.
  • Societal Benefits: Beyond direct economic value, accelerated medical progress could lead to improved health outcomes, increased productivity, and reduced long-term healthcare costs.

A conceptual framework illustrating the three key dimensions of medical therapy acceleration: economic market dynamics, healthcare infrastructure requirements, and broad societal benefits.

A conceptual framework illustrating the three key dimensions of medical therapy acceleration: economic market dynamics, healthcare infrastructure requirements, and broad societal benefits.

Conclusion

Increasing trial capacity by 12.3x (95% CI: 4.19x-61.3x) through lower-cost decentralized trials (RECOVERY: $500 (95% CI: $400-$2.50K)/patient vs $41K (95% CI: $20K-$120K) traditional) enables testing far more treatments simultaneously. While market dynamics and system capacities are important considerations, the potential economic and societal impacts underscore the transformative value of advancing medical innovation.

A comparison showing the massive disparity in per-patient costs between traditional trials (41,000) and decentralized trials like RECOVERY (500), alongside the resulting 12.3-fold increase in trial capacity.

A comparison showing the massive disparity in per-patient costs between traditional trials (41,000) and decentralized trials like RECOVERY (500), alongside the resulting 12.3-fold increase in trial capacity.

Sources

  1. Economic Valuation of New Drug Approvals - arXiv
  2. Drug Development Cost Analysis - JAMA Network
  3. FDA Drug Approvals - Nature Reviews Drug Discovery