Sinopsis
The Bio Report podcast, hosted by veteran journalist Daniel Levine, focuses on the intersection of biotechnology with business, science, and policy.
Episodios
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Immunotherapies ETF Lets Biotech Investors Bet on Emerging Sector
22/10/2015 Duración: 20minA new class of immunotherapies is promising to radically alter the treatment of cancers and has generated excitement among investors for their groundbreaking potential. Now the Loncar Cancer Immunotherapy ETF provides a way for investors to bet on the sector through an exchange traded fund that consists of both Big Pharma and emerging growth biotechs leading the sector. We spoke to Brad Loncar, CEO of Loncar Investments and creator of the ETF, about the fund, why the focus on this narrow slice of the biotech world, and why he thinks immunotherapies will dramatically reshape cancer care in the years ahead.
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Biotech Investors Turn Their Eyes to Policy Matters
16/10/2015 Duración: 24minWall Street doesn’t like uncertainty and there are a number of policy issues now brewing that threaten to create some uncertainty for the biotechnology industry. As the BIO Investor Forum kicks off in San Francisco October 20 and 21, bringing together investors and CEOs for two days of panels and presentations, the conference will turn its attention to policy issues and the effects they have on valuations within this industry. We spoke to Sara Radcliffe, president and CEO of the California Life Sciences Association and a policy panelist and the BIO Investor Forum, about policy issues the industry faces, the growing controversy over pricing, and what policy matters investors should be watching.
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Why the MedTech Industry Should Worry About Future Innovation
08/10/2015 Duración: 23minThe medtech industry has enjoyed robust M&A activity, strong financings, and a rise in R&D investments, but other numbers point to troubling developments that threaten the future health and growth of the industry, according to a new report from EY. We spoke to Ellen Licking, EY Life Sciences lead analyst, about the report, concerns about the venture capital industry’s move away from the sector, and questions about who will fund early-stage innovation that will be necessary for the future growth of the industry.
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Rare Disease Drug Developer Shows Speed of Business Model
01/10/2015 Duración: 18minVtesse, a rare disease drug development company, this week announced that it was initiating a late-stage pivotal trial for its lead experimental therapeutic to treat Niemann-Pick Type C1 disease. The start of the trial for the nine month old company represents a major milestone and suggest its history with the National Institutes of Health and the rare disease drug accelerator Cydan Development may point to new ways of cutting the time and cost of advancing a drug to market. We spoke to Ben Machielse, CEO of Vtesse, about the rapid pace at which the company has been able to move, the role NIH has played, and whether this points to new ways to accelerate the drug development process.
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Ensuring Value-Based Care Addresses What Matters to Patients
24/09/2015 Duración: 21minThe U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has been working to move Medicare from fee-for-service to value-based payments. It’s seeking to get 90 percent of payments to being value-based by 2018. The problem, according to a recent Viewpoint in JAMA, is that when addressing life-ending chronic conditions faced by older patients, traditional professional standards that drive today’s metrics don’t effectively address patient desires. We spoke to Joanne Lynn, director of the Altarum Institute’s Center for Elder Care and Advanced Illness and lead author of the JAMA Viewpoint, about what value-based care means for patients near the end of their lives, the need to recognize the great variance in patient desires, and how healthcare systems will need to change to account for this.
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California, Aid-in-Dying, and What We’ve Learned from Oregon
17/09/2015 Duración: 18minThe California legislature earlier this month passed a bill that would allow physicians to aid terminally ill patients who wanted to end their lives. California would become the fifth state to enact such legislation. We spoke to David Grube, national medical director of Compassion & Choices, a nonprofit working to expand end of life options, about the legislation, how attitudes among the public and physicians have changed, and what we’ve learned since Oregon passed the first such law 17 years ago.
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FDA Guidance on Names for Biologics and Biosimilars and its Implications
10/09/2015 Duración: 21minThe U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently released long-awaited draft guidance regarding the naming of biologics, biosimilars, and interchangeable biologics. At the same time the agency released a proposed rule to apply the naming scheme to six current biological products with, or expected to soon have, biosimilar competitors. We spoke to Gillian Woollett, senior vice president with the healthcare business strategy and public policy advisory firm Avalere Health, about the FDA’s actions, their implications, and some potential unintended consequences.
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Understanding the Cost and Value of Cancer Therapies
03/09/2015 Duración: 21minThe National Comprehensive Cancer Network in October will release a new tool designed to help doctors understand the value of different cancer therapies by taking into account the costs of treatments. The effort from the influential group follows similar initiatives by Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and the American Society of Clinical Oncology. We spoke to Bob Carlson, CEO of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, about the rising costs of cancer care, the new tool, and what impact it will likely have on drug pricing in the future.
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Jimmy Carter’s Final Wish: Eradicating Guinea Worm
27/08/2015 Duración: 19minPresident Jimmy Carter, at a recent press conference discussing his cancer diagnosis and treatment, expressed his wish to outlive the last Guinea worm. The Carter Center, since 1986, has led a global effort to eradicate Guinea worm disease with great success and its goal is within reach. We spoke to Ernesto Ruiz-Tiben, director of The Carter Center’s Guinea Worm Eradication Program, about its efforts, the history behind it, and what lessons can be drawn in combating other public health threats throughout the world.
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The Quest for a Pink Viagra
20/08/2015 Duración: 20minSprout Pharmaceuticals earlier this week won a controversial U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval of Addyi, the first drug approved in the United States to treat female sexual dysfunction. Following the news, Valeant Pharmaceuticals said it would acquire Sprout for $1 billion. We spoke filmmaker Liz Canner, director of the documentary Orgasm, Inc., about Addyi, the drug industry’s long standing pursuit of a female Viagra, and why its approval is troubling to many people.
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Free Speech Ruling May Force FDA to Rethink Off-Label Marketing
14/08/2015 Duración: 20minEarlier this month in a preemptive challenge from Amarin Pharma against the U.S. Food and Drug Administration a federal judge ruled that the FDA cannot prohibit a drugmaker from promoting the off-label use of a drug if it does so through the dissemination of truthful and non-misleading information. The decision about the First Amendment Rights of a pharmaceutical company is seen as a significant ruling in a long-standing battle between the agency and the industry that has played out over the past 20 years. We spoke to John Kamp, executive director of the Coalition for Healthcare Communication, about the case, the issues behind it, and its implications for how the industry and agency will act going forward.
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Drugmakers Often Late to Report Serious Side Effects
06/08/2015 Duración: 14minDrugmakers about 10 percent of the time fail to report serious adverse events to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration within the time required, according to a recent study in the Journal of the American Medical Association. We spoke to Pinar Karaca-Mandic, study co-author and associate professor of Health Policy and Management at the School of Public Health at the University of Minnesota, about the study, the concerns it raises, and whether regulators need to rethink the way adverse events are reported.
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When Hospital Cause, Rather than Cure, Deadly Infections
30/07/2015 Duración: 13minA growing problem with drug resistant infections acquired in hospitals is catching the eye of Consumer Reports, which has added the incidence of two common and deadly infections to their hospital ratings. The ratings come in the second part of a three-part investigation in the antibiotic crisis. We spoke to Doris Peter, director of Consumer Reports’ Health Ratings Center, about the study, what the highest rated hospitals are doing that the lower rated ones are not, and things patients can do to safeguard themselves when they face a hospital stay.
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Rethinking the Value and Price of Drugs
23/07/2015 Duración: 15minThe controversy over the high price of new drugs and the question of the value they provide will come under increased scrutiny thanks to a grant to a Boston-based nonprofit that works to get at these questions. The Laura and John Arnold Foundation this week announced it is providing $5.2 million to the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review aimed at transforming the way new drugs are evaluated and priced. We spoke to Sarah Emond, COO of the institute, about the work it does, what this new grant will do to expand that work, and how to get a the question of the value of new drugs.
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Harnessing Stem Cells to Test Drug Safety
16/07/2015 Duración: 19minResearchers at the University of California, Berkeley and the Gladstone Institutes have grown beating cardiac tissue from stem cells in work that may lead to new ways to quickly screen for drugs likely to cause birth defects in the heart and identify drugs that may be dangerous during pregnancy. We spoke to Bruce Conklin, a senior investigator at the Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease, about the work, which was published in the journal Nature Communications, the promise it has for providing more accurate insights than animal models, and whether the approach could be expanded to other cell types to screen for drug toxicity to other organs.
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CrowdMed Enlists the Wisdom of Crowds to Solve Medical Mysteries
09/07/2015 Duración: 19minFor many patients with rare and difficult to diagnose conditions, it can take many years and many doctors to find a correct answer. CrowdMed is trying to offering an alternative to patients by allowing them to tap the wisdom of crowds and letting medical detectives who sign on to the site try to find the right answer. We spoke to Jared Heyman, founder and CEO of CrowdMed, about the problem with the traditional way doctors diagnose patients, the wisdom of crowds, and the case for making medicine a team sport.
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Biotech’s Record Performance and Looming Threats
02/07/2015 Duración: 19minLast year, the biotechnology industry set records across the board for financial metrics, a reflection of product success, new drug approvals, and free-flowing investment capital. Despite the record performance, concerns continue about growing pricing pressure and maturing pipelines that represent challenges with which the industry must contend. We spoke to Glen Giovannetti, EY’s Global Life Sciences Leader about his firms recently released Beyond Borders report, what the numbers tell us, and what the industry will need to do to keep the good times rolling.
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What a Decade of Investment Tells Us about the Health of Biotech
25/06/2015 Duración: 14minA detailed view of funding of emerging therapeutic companies over the past ten years shows despite a rebound in venture financing, companies continue to struggle to find early-stage money. Nevertheless, the report shows the overall health of investment in the sector is thriving. We spoke to Dave Thomas, senior director of industry research and analysis for the Biotechnology Industry Organization and co-author of the report, about BIO’s findings, what therapeutic areas attracted the most financing, and what impact the capital markets have had on partnering and licensing activity.
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What Activist Investors Can Teach Biotech Companies
18/06/2015 Duración: 16minTo improve the long-term value of biopharmaceutical companies, management should learn to think more like activist investors, according to a new report from EY. The report argues that capital allocation and strategic decision-making could benefit from company leaders setting aside their assumptions and challenging themselves by thinking more like outsiders. We spoke to Jeff Greene, Global Life Sciences Transaction Advisory Services Leader for EY, about the report, what industry executives could learn from activists, and whether shareholder activists indeed have a track record worth emulating.
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ALS Fight Carries Muller from Patient to Biotech CEO
11/06/2015 Duración: 17minBernard Muller was a successful businessman in the maritime and oil industry, but when he was diagnosed with the neurodegenerative disease ALS in 2010, he turned his entrepreneurial skills toward developing new therapies to treat the disease. Muller co-founded the world’s largest genetic research project for ALS, project MinE, and launched Treeway, a biotech company developing new therapies for ALS. As the Biotechnology Industry Organization kicks off its BIO 2015 International Convention in Philadelphia June 15, Muller is a finalist as one of the organization’s Everyday Superheroes in the pharma/biotech category. We spoke to Muller about his decision to launch Treeway, the active role he sees for patients, and why he thinks traditional approaches to drug development and clinical trial design have not served ALS patients well.