Estimating the clinical cost of drug development for orphan versus non-orphan drugs

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Abstract

Background: High orphan drug prices have gained the attention of payers and policy makers. These prices may reflect the need to recoup the cost of drug development from a small patient pool. However, estimates of the cost of orphan drug development are sparse. Methods: Using publicly available data, we estimated the differences in trial characteristics and clinical development costs with 100 orphan and 100 non-orphan drugs. Results: We found that the out-of-pocket clinical costs per approved orphan drug to be $166 million and $291 million (2013 USD) per non-orphan drug. The capitalized clinical costs per approved orphan drug and non-orphan drug were estimated to be $291 million and $412 million respectively. When focusing on new molecular entities only, we found that the capitalized clinical cost per approved orphan drug was half that of a non-orphan drug. Conclusions: More discussion is needed to better align on which cost components should be included in research and development costs for pharmaceuticals.

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APA

Jayasundara, K., Hollis, A., Krahn, M., Mamdani, M., Hoch, J. S., & Grootendorst, P. (2019). Estimating the clinical cost of drug development for orphan versus non-orphan drugs. Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-018-0990-4

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