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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Ben Hirschler and Adam Jourdan

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Investors are betting on China’s potential to feed the global pharmaceutical pipeline, putting a multi-billion dollar price tag on a handful of stocks, even as the country struggles to close a huge R&D gap with the West.


Shares in firms such as Chi-Med, Beigene and Zai Lab have soared on international markets this year, fuelled by hopes for their drugs and recent reforms to China’s regulatory system that should speed up approvals.


“It’s almost a coming out party for China biotech,” said Christian Hogg, Chief Executive of Hutchison China MediTech or Chi-Med, which presented promising data at a global medical congress this week on a lung cancer drug it discovered in China and is developing with AstraZeneca.


“China is in vogue because of the positive moves on the regulatory side, as well as advances at companies. It’s a big, big change versus 10 years ago and it is accelerating.”


Importantly, national and provincial authorities are also moving faster to agree payments for innovative drugs, albeit after negotiating price discounts in many cases.


Yet amid the euphoria it is easy to lose sight of the fact that China still has far to go. It contributes just 4 per cent of global drug innovation — as measured by the number of products in development and recent launches — against 50 per cent from the United States, according to an October 2016 report from four Chinese pharmaceutical associations.


“It is very apparent they are trying to transition to being more of a novel drug development environment and bring in more innovative research,” Scott Gottlieb, head of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), said.


“I think it’s going to be a long transition ... we built up an ecosystem in this country over decades and decades.”


China’s traditional strengths lie in generic drugs and the bulk production of active pharmaceutical ingredients that are found in pills in pharmacies worldwide.


The shift in focus to original research is a change in mindset, although it builds on the success of contract research and manufacturing company WuXi Biologics, which does much of the legwork for China’s budding biotechs.


Bi Jingquan, the reformist bureaucrat who has led China’s drugs watchdog the CFDA since 2015, views innovative — and affordable — drugs as the key to meeting the country’s growing clinical demands.


China is now the world’s second-biggest drugs market after the United States, with more cases of cancer and diabetes than any other nation, fuelled by fast food, smoking and pollution.


But the CFDA head lamented in a recent speech that Chinese domestic drug industry R&D investment was only 42 billion yuan ($6.3 billion) last year, a small slice of the $157 billion spent worldwide by drug companies in 2016, according to market intelligence group EvaluatePharma.


Redressing the balance is a priority.


“We want to make our pharma industry big and strong, make our drug companies more competitive, so that we can shift our country’s long-standing reliance on imported new drugs,” said Bi Jingquan’s deputy Wu Zhen.


A big part of that involves overhauling regulation, with a new system now in place to accelerate full and conditional drug approvals as the CFDA strives to narrow a typical five to seven year lag between how long new drugs reach the market in China compared with Western countries.


Plans announced last week mean the agency will now accept data from overseas clinical trials. That was applauded by Pfizer, the top foreign drugmaker in China, highlighting the stiff competition still facing local biotechs.


So far many of the new drugs discovered in China are follow-on medicines in established therapeutic classes rather than ground-breaking first-in-class treatments.


Some global companies like Swiss-based Novartis and Roche, with deeper institutional scientific knowledge, are also tapping into China’s science base to discover their own promising new drugs in the country.


Still, Chinese firms are notching up their first home-grown successes, particularly in cancer, with Shenzhen Chipscreen Biosciences winning a CFDA green light for the first modern oncology drug, used to treat a rare lymph-node cancer, in 2015. — Reuters


China biotech’s ‘party’ masks long road ahead


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