Partnering for Growth Thomas Jefferson University, June 7th, 2013

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
David M. Pollock Medical College of Georgia Discovery-Academia.
Advertisements

Consortium québécois sur la découverte du médicament Facilitating creative partnerships in biopharmaceutical research Ottawa, November 30 th, 2009 Diane.
West Midlands Academic Health Science Network Mental Health Clinical Priority Event October 10 th, 2013 Peter Lewis Medical Director, Birmingham and Solihull.
Research & Innovation Evolution from IMI1 to IMI2: challenges ahead Elmar Nimmesgern, PhD DG Research & Innovation 1.
Retreat Topics iPSC Opportunities in NIAMS Diseases Science Management Forum: Leveraging and Strategic Funding Collaborations Atopic Dermatitis Advancing.
Industrial Careers Expo Dr Heather Bryson 10 October 2012 University of Sheffield.
Eli Lilly and Company – Tailored Therapeutics and Diagnostics © Eli Lilly and Company 2012 The views and opinions expressed herein and/or during the accompanying.
The Statisticians Role in Pharmaceutical Development
Michel Goldman, Executive Director Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI)
Proprietary and Confidential © AstraZeneca 2008 FOR INTERNAL USE ONLY Opportunities to bridge the technology gap between academia and industry. The view.
1 Confidential Science of Stem Cells and Potential Applications Andrea Hunt February 22, 2008.
Global Context As the rich world gets older and sicker and the poor world gets wealthier and fatter, the demand for medical innovation is exploding. Clever.
CUHP Cambridge University Health Partners (CUHP) unites a world-leading University and three high- performing NHS Foundation Trusts centred on the Cambridge.
Driving Innovation Concept to Commercialisation A strategy for business innovation, Zahid Latif Head of Healthcare Mark Glover 12 th January.
What Do Toxicologists Do?
Irish Health Research: Collaboration and Partnership HSE Regional Library & Information Health Research Seminar Dr. Steevens’ Hospital 11th February 2011.
SUCCESS FACTORS IN THE PHARMACEUTICAL MARKETPLACE
Discovery of new medicines through new models of collaboration Simon Ward Professor of Medicinal Chemistry & Director of Translational Drug Discovery Group.
ICARE Member Reports ETP seeks to improve incentives and encourage commercial investment in new therapies. (Treatments reach patients only by commercial.
1 The UK Opportunity: what is experimental medicine? UNLOCK YOUR GLOBAL BUSINESS POTENTIAL Pre- clinical develop- ment Phase I Phase II Phase III Product.
The NIH Roadmap for Medical Research
1 Presentation title - edit in the Master slide 1 Current Investment Opportunities Professor Rory Shaw, Medical Director, Healthcare UK, UKTI.
The South African Malaria Initiative A Case Study E Jane Morris Bridging the Gap in Global Health Innovation - from Needs to.
Copyright © 2013 Quintiles Quintiles Site Management Kim Davis, SSRM June 17, 2014.
Title of Presentation 1 EU-ASEAN S&T cooperation to jointly tackle societal challenges Opportunities for future EU-ASEAN collaborations.
ONE HEALTH DR. Theo Kanellos Director, Strategic Alliances Zoetis International Services.
1 Value Assessment of Development-Stage Assets Pharmaceutical Products, Medical Devices, and Related Intellectual Property Frank S. Castellana, M.D., Eng.Sc.D.
Director, DG RTD, Directorate International Cooperation
Corporate Responsibility and Third Party Relationships GSK and Contract Manufacturers James Hagan Vice President Corporate Environment, Health & Safety.
Public Private collaborations to optimise translational research and pathways to patients: IMI Magda Chlebus, Director Science Policy Warsaw, 22 May 2015.
Where to focus? Horizon 2020 'Health, demographic change and wellbeing' Open Info Day -Horizon 2020 'Health, demographic change and wellbeing' Brussels,
The Research and Development Goals of the Global Plan to Stop TB Marcos Espinal Executive Secretary.
The Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI) High level the IMI Concept, Strategic Research Agenda and Call topics Eva Lindgren.
Managing Medical R&D Defining and Realizing Clinical and Commercial Value David J. Wierz Senior Director Commercial Investment & Pricing Strategy Wyeth-Ayerst.
Developing a National Critical Care Clinical Research Network: what’s in it for trainees? Paul Dark Associate Professor, Faculty of Medical and Human Sciences,
The Innovative Medicines Initiative A winning case for Joint Technology Initiative Status.
Developing medicines for the future and why it is challenging Angela Milne.
PUTTING THE PATIENT AT THE CENTER OF HEALTHCARE RESEARCH Towards a more inclusive model.
Presentation/Phenotype
The ERA-NET TRANSCAN-2, in continuity with the preceding ERA-NET TRANSCAN, aims at linking translational cancer research funding programmes in 15 Member.
SEEK is a drug-discovery group that uses a pioneering scientific and commercially-driven approach to create breakthrough medicines which address major.
MRC Technology an independent life science medical research charity Biotech & Money 2016 Mr Andrew Mercieca, Director of Finance
GENOMICS TO COMBAT RESISTANCE AGAINST ANTIBIOTICS IN COMMUNITY-ACQUIRED LRTI IN EUROPE (GRACE) H. Goossens (Coordinator), K. Loens (Manager), M. Ieven.
NHS Confederation Annual Conference 4 June Matching Health with Growth – the UHB Story.
NoWCADD Progress Report 2015
Author | 00 Month Year Set area descriptor | Sub level 1 The Alderley Park Story and Pharma Trends Dr Chris Doherty Vice-President AstraZeneca.
UCB Inspired by patients. Driven by science.
Targeted Drug Therapeutics An overview of our technologies and their potential 505(b)(2) applications Sino-American Regulatory Consulting Alliance Yongtian.
© UEG Presentation by Towards more coordination in health research: a report on the UEG research symposium 16/11/2012 Michael Manns General Assembly.
26th April 2016, BioTrinity - London
Andy Passey September 23rd 2003 Advanced Wound Management in Europe: Market Overview and Critical Success Factors © 2003 Frost & Sullivan. All rights reserved.
The opportunities and challenges of sharing genomics data with the pharmaceutical industry Shahid Hanif, Head of Health Data & Outcomes, ABPI DNA digest.
Developing and Broadening Specialists in Research & Development
Success Stories of Globalization in Korean Pharma
Placebo / Standard of Care (PSoC)
New Zealand Health Strategy One Team: Where to start, what to do?
© 2016 Global Market Insights, Inc. USA. All Rights Reserved Fuel Cell Market size worth $25.5bn by 2024 Bioreactor Market to surpass.
Providing Hope to Patients and their Families Around the World!
Our Company Ashman group is a new generation for Ashman Global in field of pharmaceutics and Nutraceuticals Our divisions embrace research and science.
Work Programme The social challenge “Health, Demographic Change and Wellbeing” Maia Okujava NCP for Health, Demographic Change and weii-being,
Gestora brasileiro focada exclusivamente na área da saúde.
Finland, a Global Testbed for Personalized Cancer Research?
From Bench to Clinical Applications: Money Talks
The Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund & the Focus on Life Sciences
What Makes a Novel Technology Innovative?
A science-led global healthcare company with a special purpose
Community Collaboration A Community Promotora Model
MAZARS’ CONSULTING PRACTICE
Bertelsmann Education Strategy
Presentation transcript:

Partnering for Growth Thomas Jefferson University, June 7th, 2013 Chris Yochim, Director, External Relations Strategic Partnering and Business Development

Partnering for Growth Agenda Our strategic priorities and platforms for growth Partnering strategy and capabilities Academic Collaborations to drive scientific leadership

Driving strategic priorities Achieve scientific leadership Focus on 3 distinct core disease areas Prioritise and accelerate our pipeline Strengthen our capabilities in translational science and personalised medicine AstraZeneca is a pure-play biopharmaceuticals organisation committed to delivering great medicines to patients through innovative science and excellence in development and commercialisation. In March 2013 we announced the outcomes of our strategy review designed to strengthen our ability to deliver business success in the face of an increasingly tough environment. Our overall direction stays the same but we are concentrating our skills and resources on a core set of priority pipeline projects and platforms for growing our business. Within our chosen therapy areas, we will tighten our disease focus. We will strengthen our scientific capabilities particularly in the areas of translational medicine and personalised healthcare We are also transforming our innovation model and the way we work by dramatically simplifying the business, improving productivity and building a culture that supports long-term success. Transform our innovation and culture model

We will focus on distinctive science in our core therapy areas Neuroscience Infection & Vaccines Cardio- Metabolism Respiratory/ inflammation Core TAs Oncology Opportunity-Driven AstraZeneca is committed to executing a focused innovation-driven global biopharmaceuticals strategy, exploiting our unique combination of strengths in large and small molecules, immunotherapies and protein engineering technologies. Our strategic re-focus means we are prioritising Cardiovascular & Metabolism (CVMD), Respiratory, Inflammation & AutoImmune (RIA) and Oncology as our three core areas and being more opportunistic in Infection and Neuroscience.  Our research and development efforts will be more focused. In large and small molecules R&D, we will concentrate our scientific efforts and the weight of our investment, including business development, on three core therapy areas: Respiratory, Inflammation and Autoimmunity. Cardiovascular and Metabolic Disease. Oncology.   We will continue to be active in Infection and Vaccines and in Neuroscience though our investments will be more opportunity-driven. Leveraging business development and acquisitions to deliver upside to the company’s base plan and to strengthen the pipeline further. Small Molecules Protein engineering Biologics Immuno-therapies

2 Build biologics/specialty care potential to drive sustainable longer term growth Return to growth Development Pipeline Today On track for sustainable delivery of 1 BLA/year from 2016 Convert strong biologics pipeline into future launches Create a balanced primary and specialty care product portfolio ~50% Biologics ~50% Small Molecules As we already described, currently approximately 50% of our pipeline consists of biologics We are focused on accelerating the development of our key biologics products We expect to launch a steady flow of specialty care products in the future, balancing the company’s historic strength in primary care. Development (Phase I-III) pipeline today has grown to ~50% biologics BLA = Biologics License Application

AZ Emerging Markets – A platform for success   6th fastest growing MNC pharma player across Emerging Markets Russia ~$300 Million Turkey ~$250 Million China ~$1.5 Billion ~$6bn sales in Emerging Markets S. Korea ~$240 Million Mexico ~$240 Million Brazil ~$500 Million AstraZeneca is the 6th fastest growing MNC pharma player across Emerging Markets with ~$6 billion sales a CAGR of 10% between 2008–2012 at CER. We are the 2nd leading pharmaceutical company in China by prescription sales New Emerging Markets strategy Increase investment in China and other top priority markets. This means continuing to enter or expand our presence in these key markets, including investing in research and development, sales, marketing and our people in those countries. For example in Russia, we are increasing our primary care sales force by 20%, launching a new pharmacy sales force (up to 150 FTEs) and investing in a manufacturing plant. Strengthen commercial capabilities and maximise lifecycle management opportunities to drive AstraZeneca brands in EMs. Continue to build great brands with our new products, especially Brilinta and our Diabetes Portfolio. Focus on innovative portfolio and move away from bgx. However we will focus on selective bgx BD deals where it makes sense to increase our broad market strategy. We will also access biosimilar products that complement our own portfolio. Regional BD in our growth markets will help us gain access to the right products for our key markets and leverage existing EM commercial capabilities to improve performance. For example, Linaclotide in China with Ironwood. If you are interested in finding our more about the emerging markets then please feel free to come to the panel tomorrow at 10.30am   Saudi Arabia ~$170 Million Source: Internal 2012 Ex Factory Sales / IMS

Partnering for Growth Agenda Our strategic priorities and platforms for growth Partnering strategy and capabilities Academic Collaborations to drive scientific leadership

Working in collaboration is an ongoing part of our new strategy AstraZeneca partnering strategy is focused on supplementing and complementing our core therapy areas and scientific capabilities Approximately 40% of our pipeline is sourced through external partnerships Increased focus on early stage research deals and academic alliances in 2013 Our commitment to partnering remains as strong as ever – it is a key accelerator of our strategic ambition to return to growth by strengthening the pipeline and re-establishing scientific leadership. We will continue to in-license to strengthen the pipeline, focusing predominately on the three core therapy areas, while we will seek partnerships and bolt-on acquisitions to support the late-stage and on-market portfolio to accelerate revenues. Currently approximately 40% of our pipeline is sourced through partnerships There will be a more intense focus of business development efforts by our small molecules and biologics biotech units on early-stage academic and biotech alliances. For example our recent deals with Moderna and KI In addition to licensing and partnering AstraZeneca will continue to seek small to medium scale opportunities for bolt-on acquisitions that strengthen our core TA portfolios . These deals may typically be of the scale of the Ardea and Amylin deals which were completed in 2012. Medium scale deals may be in the upper range value of up to $10 billion. We will seek to and have the capacity to add an additional 1–2 global partnerships beyond the existing BMS and Amgen alliances without impacting our ability to operate independently and without compromising our existing partnering commitments. We completed over 80 deals in 2012 of which approximately one third were pre-clinical or research collaborations. Pursue in-licensing and bolt-on acquisitions that strengthen the core TA portfolios Seek 1-2 additional global peer-to-peer partnerships beyond BMS and Amgen alliances 8

Building direct early access to our R&D Cardiovascular/ Gastrointestinal Oncology New Opportunities Respiratory and Inflammation Infection CNS and Pain Science and Technology Personalised Healthcare and Biomarkers Emerging Markets and Asia R&D Scouting Diligence Transaction Alliance Mgmt Global Medicines Development Internal and external opportunities Market Innovative Medicines Units Small Molecules Biologics Late-stage Development Discovery and Early Development R&D Enabling functions Cross functional transaction team

As a Commercial partner we bring.... Truly global commercial operations footprint with both primary and specialty care focus  A large and growing presence in emerging markets including China, Brazil, Russia  Sales, marketing and medical excellence to tailor brands and drive performance in 100 countries  We bring a broad range of skills and resources to the relationship, including leading Research and Development (R&D), commercial, regulatory, and market access capabilities and a global reach combined with local experience and knowledge. We operate in over 100 countries and our innovative medicines are used by millions of patients worldwide. Leading the way in innovative commercial channels and payer relations No need to go through the list! Innovative sales and marketing channels to better serve the needs of today’s customers  Life-cycle management expertise to help extend the value of the products we market 

As a Development partner we bring... A global R&D footprint with local insights and capabilities  75% of our portfolio applies a personalised healthcare approach  90% of pipeline addresses payer evidence to support reimbursement  87% of projects apply new methods of clinical design and interpretation  This slide illustrates some of the core scientific capabilities that we offer (again, wouldn’t spend too long here as you will be running out of time!) World-class regulatory, manufacturing and protein engineering capabilities  11

Partnering for Growth Agenda Our strategic priorities and platforms for growth Partnering strategy and capabilities Academic Collaborations to drive scientific leadership

Academic Alliance: History of strategic collaboration Key Strategic Alliances (Since Jan 2011) Collaborative Research (201) Consortiums & Foundations (41) Dundee Biomarker/Safety Regional Economic Development Medicines for Malaria TB Consortium MTA’s 300+

Creative alliances to drive early scientific discovery projects A5 alliance, to study a major risk factor for Alzheimer's disease, the apolipoprotein E4 genotype (ApoE) Alzheimer's Disease Research Institute at Weill Cornell, Washington University in St Louis, The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research and the University of British Columbia. 7 Way-Consortium: Critical Path to TB Drug Regimens AstraZeneca, Bayer, Sanofi and Tibotec have signed on with TB Alliance and the World Health Organization to share information about the TB compounds in their pipelines to quickly identify and collaborate to develop the most promising TB drug regimens AZ & GSK forge alliance with Univ. Manchester Collaborative Centre for Inflammation Unique Pre-Competitive collaboration to establish a world-leading translational centre for inflammatory diseases. Scientists will be recruited for new positions to direct the research in line with strategic priorities set jointly by GSK, AstraZeneca and The University of Manchester, with the ultimate goal of translating findings into new and improved treatments. Broad Institute The Broad Institute's 100,000 compound library will be tapped for weapons against drug resistant strains of bacteria. targeted towards the discovery of new antibiotics and other treatments for infectious diseases.

Fostering Alliances for Clinical Development Fostering helps us to broaden our drug development activity by working with experienced clinical development institutions which can take the lead on early-stage development of AstraZeneca compounds. When the compounds reach the proof-of-concept stage, we can opt in and continue development with a milestone payment, or we can opt out and receive a royalty later on when the compound is approved and commercialized Singapore National University and the National Cancer Centre development of AstraZeneca compounds for hepato-cellular carcinoma which have already undergone clinical testing in western locations. Applying their experience to conduct clinical trials in wider patient populations, broadening our drug development capabilities in Asia. Cancer Research UK and Cancer Research Technology - the charity's development and commercialisation arm. AstraZeneca’s compound, AZD-3965 – a first-of-its-kind experimental drug to potentially treat a range of cancers- into clinical development. Working with CRT will enable a compound with a very exciting mechanism to be evaluated in patients using Cancer Research UK’s extensive clinical network.

Partnering areas of interest Cardiovascular & Gastrointestinal Our research focuses on small molecule and biologics for diabetes and diabetic complications, obesity, atherosclerosis, haemostasis, gastrointestinal, abdominal aortic aneurysm, bleeding disorders as well as re-profiling compounds, innovative drug-delivery systems and regenerative medicine. Oncology Our small and large molecule research focuses on cancer of the breast, prostate, gastrointestinal tract, lung, as well as haematological malignancies, “niche” cancers, novel technologies and biomarkers. Respiratory & Inflammation We are particularly interested in asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus and novel inhalation approaches. AstraZeneca is a world leader in Cardiovascular and Gastrointestinal medicines, committed to delivering new innovative medicines that make a difference to patients and society. For more than 30 years, AstraZeneca has remained committed to pushing the boundaries of cancer research and delivering the cancer therapies of tomorrow. We’re taking an innovative patient-based approach to treatment, and drawing on partnerships across the globe with academia, governments, scientific organisations and patient groups, as well as other biopharmaceutical companies. AstraZeneca has a 40-year history in small molecule research and a best-in-class pipeline of biologic candidates for respiratory, inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. Our goal is to lead the advancement of innovative medicines with greater efficacy, improved safety and enhanced convenience.

Partnering areas of interest Infection Our partnership interests also include: viral infections such as respiratory viruses (e.g flu, RSV), HCV, HBV and herpes family viruses, as well as systemic fungal infections, and diagnostics. Novel vaccines to address bacterial and viral infections with limited current treatment options are also of interest. Neuroscience We are interested in small and large molecule research to discover and develop new treatments in neurology, psychiatry and pain. Personalised Healthcare & Biomarkers We are looking for additional biomarker capabilities that can deliver clinically meaningful segmentation of therapeutic response, including methodology for patient selection, disease identification, and pharmacological assessment. Science & Technology Key areas of interest include predictive safety and predictive efficacy platforms, target validation tools and technologies, novel HTS/lead generation approaches, novel chemical libraries with evidence of biological relevance, stem cell biology and, novel technologies for antibodies and vaccines. Our Infection group aims to discover and develop effective, targeted therapies to address unmet needs in serious bacterial, fungal or viral infections and neglected diseases, using both small-molecule and biologic/vaccine approaches. AstraZeneca, with our strategic partners, has one of the world’s largest antibacterial pipelines targeting serious bacterial infections. We aim to deliver solutions for diseases of the developing world (viral, parasitic and bacterial) through innovative partnerships with academics, NGOs and peer companies. Neuroscience is an area with huge unmet medical need. Our virtualised Neuroscience model is pioneering new ways to share cost, risk and reward with research partners to deliver effective treatments for CNS disorders and pain. We are working with a network of external partners to progress new projects flexibly and quickly from discovery through early development. Our Personalised Healthcare and Biomarkers (PHB) group aims to create superior outcomes for patients, prescribers and payers by finding the biomarkers and diagnostics that ensure we deliver effective medicines that target a selected patient population We are also looking for external partners to identify, validate, and manufacture diagnostics to regulatory standards. The Science and Technology team works across therapeutic areas and functions to identify, evaluate, and secure opportunities in key areas of technology that will enhance the quality, effectiveness and productivity of our research.

Personalised Healthcare – an open approach to collaboration Partnership and collaboration at the core of PHC strategy No single partner can address all of our PHC needs Series of partnerships will help us to achieve our aims Strategic alliances with key academic centres and independent diagnostic developers Early engagement with partners enables us to share needs and match up partner products

Diligence Process: Five Dimensions for success Right target Strong link between target and disease Differentiating efficacy Available and predictive biomarkers Adequate bioavailability and tissue exposure Human PK / PD prediction, PD biomarkers Drug-drug interaction Right tissue/ Right exposure Clear assessment of safety risks Clear understanding of risk-benefit Availability of predictive biomarkers Right safety Scientific evidence in lead indication Risk / benefit stratification of patient population PHC strategy including diagnostic / biomarkers Right patients Differentiated value proposition vs. future standard of care Invest to win / priority areas – DTPP / CDTP Market access / payer / provider focus Personalised healthcare strategy including diagnostic / biomarkers Right commercial

Why Partner with AstraZeneca? Exclusive focus on innovative pharmaceutical medicines Focused commitment to early and late-stage partnering Innovative commercial channels, underpinned by global reach Access to early payer and regulatory involvement to secure reimbursement and market access Exceptional commercial and R&D presence in emerging markets and Asia Expertise in biologics and small molecule discovery, development and manufacturing Rapid evaluation and insightful feedback to partners Alliance management continuity throughout the deal life cycle Just to summarise Long term commitment to innovative medicines and to partnering Leading the way in innovative commercial channels and payer relations Proven world class commercial function with truly global reach Established alliance management centre of excellence responsible for actively monitoring the progress of our partnerships and the sharing of best practice Our ultimate goal is to ensure that we are successful in bring products to the market through the combination of our unique strengths Desire to create partnerships that achieve mutual goals 20

For more information about partnering with AstraZeneca, visit astrazeneca.com/partnering Chris.yochim@astrazeneca.com