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THE
END OF THE REVOLUTION
by
Matthew Albright
Revolutions follow
a predictable pattern. After the smoke clears and the excited rhetoric
of a utopian future is exhausted, sleeves are rolled up and the
real work begins. The heroes of the revolution are exiled, if not
executed, and bureaucrats and businessmen take their place. The
heady days of rebelling against the old regimes become quiet days
of building new structures and organizations with which to carry
out the revolutions promises. People resume their lives and
then, later, often question whether the revolution really changed
anything.
And so it goes
with the genomic revolution. Quiet days of economic and scientific
reflection have replaced the rhetoric of a future where suffering
and hunger are defeated. Genetic determinism, the march anthem of
the revolution, has been quieted (but not yet silenced) with the
genome projects revelation that humans have only a few genes
more than a fruit fly or worm. Heroes of the revolution like Craig
Venter that proud mixture of rogue scientist and American
entrepreneur who gave voice to the hopes of every budding scientist
millionaire as well as to the dreams of a medicated society
have been told to get off the battlefield and make way for business
designs that will actually make money from their discoveries. Recent
business magazine articles, reports from government agencies, and
analyses from industry consultants have all reported that the fun
is over and the future is questionable for the budding biotech industry.
Even the foot
soldiers of the revolution, the researchers themselves, talk of
the death of genomics and are looking for the next sexy science.
In terms of research, genomics is passé and proteomics
is the new buzz work, the faculty dean of Harvard Medical
School told The Boston Globe. The genomic slogan a
world with no disease has been borrowed, unchanged, for proteomics.
Knowing the structure of the protein gives you a big clue
in how to build drugs, says John Novell, head of the NIHs
proteomics effort.
In Unraveling
the DNA Myth, an article in the February 2002 Harpers,
Barry Commoner writes that the biotechnology industry is based
on science that is forty years old and conveniently void of more
recent results. Chakrabartys oil-eating bacteria that
never actually ate oil should have been a sign of things to come.
The products of the genetic research so far have been questionable
at best; at times they have been downright fatal. Gene therapy killed
more patients then it helped. Genetically modified crops did not
give the hunger-eradicating yields that they promised and now, in
fact, threaten to destroy the planets food supply. Genetic
tests gave questionable risk statistics for non-curable diseases
which informed patients of the risk factors they knew they had before
they took the tests.
If biotechnology
companies are to survive the post-revolution purges, they must make
the jump from an era of inventiveness to an era of industry, producing
real products that yield real profits. Standing in the way of real
products is a minefield of life patents created by the biotech industry
itself. Life patents have become destructive tools exploiting
indigenous cultures and endangering the worlds seed and food
supply but their final victim may be the biotech industry
itself.
As in any good minefield, no one is quite sure how many life patents
there are. Two years ago, Todd Dickinson, the former director of
the US patent office, told Congress that his office had awarded
6,000 patents on full length genes from human, animal, plant,
bacterial, and viral sources. Last summer, John J. Doll, the
head of the patent offices biotech department, said 20,000
gene patents had been awarded, with another 25,000 waiting in the
wings. Exactly what these patents cover is also in question. One
estimate is that life patents cover 500,000 different molecular
structures.
Historically,
the United States has excelled at taking enthusiastic inventiveness
and turning it into competitive, lucrative industries. In the case
of both the airplane and the automobile, freedom from patent constraints
was an essential part of the birth of formidable industries. The
aeronautic industry followed the automobiles lead and pooled
its patents, including the Wright brothers original patent
that covered all airplanes. By freeing the basic research from patents,
the tinkering of gentlemen hobbyists was turned into an industry
that could be largely credited for establishing the United States
military and economic might in the 20th century. The same needs
to happen with life patents and the biotech industry.
The blockbuster
years are over for the drug companies. There are no drugs in development
that will give Big Pharma the success they have come to expect in
the past. They are coming off two decades where they increased sales
from $22 billion to $149 billion, giving back an average annual
return of 25% to their investors. But experts suggest that the pharmaceutical
industry must completely overhaul its way of doing business in order
to survive. They are being told to create some real products
like drugs that work - or they will go the way of the dot-coms.
The hope of building
an actual industry from the genomic revolution lies in attacking
a much wider range of ailments with much smaller target audiences.
It means a shift from a relative handful of blockbusters to
a medical armamentarium consisting of thousands of sharpshooter
drugs aimed at small disease populations, according to Fortune
magazine. In the entire history of the drug industry, only 500 basic
targets disease-causing functions in cells have been
researched. There will now be 10,000 potential new targets because
of the discoveries in genomics. In other words, the blockbuster
model for developing drugs must be replaced with the sharpshooter
model: lots of products, each intended for few people.
This is where
biotechnology companies, university facilities, and governmental
research institutes come in. Where once biotech companies were the
golden boys of venture capitalists and day traders, they have now
become the farm system of the pharmaceuticals or, like
Amgen and Venters Celera, they have consolidated and developed
into pharmaceutical companies themselves. Experts claim that in
order to turn these new drug hopes into actual products, pharmaceutical
companies must increase their R & D money as well as broaden
their partnerships with smaller, more efficient research groups
like biotechs and universities.
But the pharmaceutical
companies, and the biotech and research institutes they employ,
will not be able to develop thousands of new drugs with any efficiency
if the basic descriptions of molecular materials are caught up in
patents. It is analogous to the threat the early aerospace industry
was under with the Wright brothers patent infringement suits.
In order for efficient and useful products to be developed from
the Wright brothers invention, a broad number of technologies
needed to be developed on top of the basic Wright design. In order
to develop the 10,000 drug targets, freedom must be given for biotech
to explore the basic upstream knowledge. Paralyzing upstream knowledge
with patents will be like giving the Wright Brothers a twenty-year
monopoly on the airplane.
When and if the
new drugs promised by the genomic revolution reach the market, they
will be covered not by life patents patents that describe
molecular structures, transgenic animals, or plants
but by patents that describe laboratory-produced chemical compounds
that affect molecular structures. The only company to ever make
real money on a product directly from a life patent was Amgen with
their EPO patents and Amgen killed many a good compatriot
in the biotech revolution to keep its EPO monopoly.
The justification
for life patents as a counter to the financial risk inherent in
developing drugs has become moot as well. Technological improvements
in genetic research, called pharmacogenomics, have made drug development
much less expensive. The efficiencies in cost lie in the amazing
progress that genetic research has made by using computers, robotics,
and free public genetic databases in drug development. Pharmacogenomics
will make drug development cheaper by $300 million and take two
years off the entire process, according to the Boston Consulting
Group. Before beginning human trials, researchers may be able to
model how the drugs work in the human body, what side effects the
drugs might have on patients, and how the drugs interact with other
drugs. This will save thousands of hours of research by eliminating
hopeless drugs in the beginning stages of research instead of during
costly trials.
The importance
of patents in reaping a return on investments remains questionable.
The famous Office of Technology Assessment report of 1993 which
found that development costs nearly $400 million a drug, also reported
that sales of drug products declined very little after their patents
expired. Three years after patent expiration, the mean annual
dollar sales of the original compound were 83% of mean sales revenue
in the year of patent expiration. Big Pharma is well aware
that the financial success of a product depends much more on marketing
and advertising than on patent protection as any glance at
a drug companys budget will prove.
The biotech and
pharmaceutical companies have a lot of work to do to produce products
that work from the genetic discoveries of the past ten years. Unless
they do something to unravel the mass of life patents that currently
restrict upstream knowledge, that work will never get done. The
genomic revolution may prove to be one of those revolutions that
claim many victims but very few real victories.
Matthew Albright is a Harvard Divinity School Student and a second
year intern at CRG. He is the author of Profits Pending,
a book on life patents to be published this fall by Common Courage
Press.
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