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Past Event

A Brookings Global Economy and Development Policy Briefing

The New Landscape: Drug Development for Neglected Diseases

Global Health, Global Economics, Development

Event Summary

Every year "neglected" diseases such as tuberculosis and malaria take 3 million lives. Because their victims cannot afford first-world drug prices, they have historically attracted little investment from the pharmaceutical industry. Yet, since 2000, product development public-private partnerships (PDPs) have generated at least sixty new collaborative research projects. Despite relatively little public funding or new policy initiatives, the potential of the PDP approach has far reaching implications for global health research policy, as well as the philanthropic, industry, and government sectors.

Event Information

When

Monday, April 24, 2006
9:30 AM to 11:00 AM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Map

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

Email: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

To examine the potential of PDPs, Brookings will convene a discussion with opening remarks by Dr. Mary Moran, project director, Pharmaceutical Research and Development Policy Group, the George Institute. Dr. Moran is the principal author of a recent London School of Economics study titled The New Landscape of Neglected Disease Drug Development. A group of leading experts will participate: Amanda Glassman, deputy director, Health Financing Task Force, United Nations Foundation; Dr. Lynn Marks, senior vice president, GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) Medicine Development Center, Infectious Diseases; and Dr. Chris Hentschel, president & CEO, Medicines for Malaria Venture. Lael Brainard, vice president and director of the Global Economy and Development Center at Brookings, will moderate the discussion.

An audience question and answer session will follow the presentation.

Transcript

LAEL BRAINARD: All of the innovations or the vast majority of them, for many years, have been targeted at diseases that Mary calls in her report commercial diseases, which is a terrible term but it does capture that essence that there's a commercial return on being able to actually develop therapeutics and diagnostics around those diseases, and there is no commercial return for the diseases that kill so many more people in poor countries.

There are a variety of proposals that have been out in this domain over the last year or two, some of which Brookings has been very closely associated with, in partnership with people at Harvard and at the Center for Global Development.

Mary Moran's news today I think is very positive news, which is that even in the absence of big new government framework, things are happening in the field of public/private partnerships that are very exciting.

Read the full transcript (PDF—192kb)

Participants

Discussant

Mary Moran, M.D.

Project Director, Pharmaceutical Research & Development Policy Group, The George Institute

Moderator

Lael Brainard

Vice President and Director, Global Economy and Development

Panelists

Amanda Glassman

Nonresident Fellow, Global Economy and Development

Chris Hentschel, PhD

President and CEO, Medicines for Malaria Venture

Jerald C. Sadoff, MD

President & Chief Executive Officer, AERAS Global Tuberculosis Vaccine Foundation

Lynn Marks, M.D.

Senior Vice President, GSK Medicine Development Center


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