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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, March 2, 2018
Big pharma, big data: why drugmakers want your health records
Ben Hirschler-MARCH 1, 2018 LONDON (Reuters) - Drugmakers are racing to scoop up patient health records and strike deals with technology companies as big data analytics start to unlock a trove of information about how medicines perform in the real world.
Studying such real-world evidence offers manufacturers a powerful tool
to prove the value of their drugs - something Roche aims to leverage,
for example, with last month’s $2 billion purchase of Flatiron Health.
Real-world evidence involves collecting data outside traditional
randomised clinical trials, the current gold standard for judging
medicines, and interest in the field is ballooning.
Half of the world’s 1,800 clinical studies involving real-world or
real-life data since 2006 have been started in the last three years,
with a record 300 last year, according to a Reuters analysis of the U.S.
National Institutes of Health’s clinicaltrials.gov website.
Hot areas for such studies include cancer, heart disease and respiratory disorders.
Historically, it has been hard to get a handle on how drugs work in
routine clinical practice but the rise of electronic medical records,
databases of insurance claims, fitness wearables and even social media
now offers a wealth of new data.
The ability to capture the experience of real-world patients, who
represent a wider sample of society than the relatively narrow selection
enrolled into traditional trials, is increasingly useful as medicine
becomes more personalised.
However it also opens a new front in the debate about corporate access
to personal data at a time when tech giants Apple, Amazon and Google’s
parent Alphabet are seeking to carve out a healthcare niche.
Some campaigners and academics worry such data will be used primarily as
a commercial tool by drugmakers and may intrude upon patients’ privacy.
DRUGMAKERS DELVE
Learning from the experience of millions of patients provides
granularity and is especially important in a disease like cancer, where
doctors want to know if there is a greater benefit from using a certain
drug in patients with highly specific tumour characteristics.
In the case of the Flatiron deal, Roche is acquiring a firm working with
265 U.S. community cancer clinics and six major academic research
centres, making it a leading curator of oncology evidence.
Roche, which already owns 12.6 percent of Flatiron, will pay $1.9 billion for the rest.
But interest in such real-world data goes far beyond cancer.
All the world’s major drug companies now have departments focused on the
use of real-world data across multiple diseases and several have
completed scientific studies using the information to delve into key
areas addressed by their drugs.
They include diabetes studies by AstraZeneca and Sanofi, joint research
by Pfizer and Bristol-Myers Squibb into stroke prevention, and a Takeda
Pharmaceutical project in bowel disease.
“It’s getting more expensive to do traditional clinical trial research,
so industry is looking at ways it can achieve similar goals using
routinely collected data,” said Paul Taylor, a health informatics expert
at University College London.
“The thing that has made all this possible is the increasing digitisation of health records.”
Significantly, the world’s regulators are taking notice.

FILE PHOTO: A surgery nurse is seen
beside the heart beat monitor in the operating theatre of the
Unfallkrankenhaus Berlin (UKB) hospital in Berlin, Germany February 29,
2008.REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch /File Photo
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner Scott Gottlieb -
the gatekeeper to the world’s biggest pharmaceutical market - believes
more widespread use of real-world evidence (RWE) could cut drug
development costs and help doctors make better medical choices.
Under the 21st Century Cures Act, the FDA has been directed to evaluate
the expanded use of RWE. “As the breadth and reliability of RWE
increases, so do opportunities for FDA to also make use of this
information,” Gottlieb said in a speech last September.
The European Medicines Agency, too, is studying ways to use RWE in its decision making.
WHOSE DATA IS IT ANYWAY?
But the growth of real-world evidence also raises questions about data
access and patient privacy, as Britain’s National Health Service (NHS) -
a uniquely comprehensive source of healthcare data - has found to its
cost.
An ambitious scheme to pool anonymised NHS patient data for both
academic and commercial use had to be scrapped in 2016 after protests
from both patients and doctors.
FILE PHOTO: Nurse Ana Linas looks at patients' remote check-up results
from Hospital del Mar in Barcelona, Spain, December 4, 2012.
REUTERS/Albert Gea/File Photo
And last year a British hospital trust was rapped by the Information
Commissioner’s Office for misusing data, after it passed on personal
information of around 1.6 million patients to artificial-intelligence
firm Google DeepMind.
Sam Smith, a campaigner for medical data privacy at Britain’s
MedConfidential, is concerned drugmakers’ RWE studies are just a cover
for marketing. “How much of this is really for scientific discovery and
how much is it about boosting profits by getting one product used
instead of another?”
Some academics also worry RWE studies could be susceptible to “data
dredging”, where multiple analyses are conducted until one gives the
hoped-for result.
AstraZeneca’s head of innovative medicines Mene Pangalos, whose company
has struck several deals with tech start-ups and patient groups to
gather real-world data, acknowledges ensuring privacy and scientific
rigour is a challenge.
“It’s a real problem but I don’t think it’s insurmountable,” he told Reuters.
“As people get more comfortable with real-world evidence studies I think
it will be much more widely used. I would like to see a world where
real-world data can be used to help change drug labels and be used much
more aggressively than it is today.”
NEXT FRONTIER
Roche Chief Executive Severin Schwan believes data is the next frontier
for drugmakers and he is betting that the Swiss group’s leadership in
both cancer medicine and diagnostics will put it in pole position.
“There’s an opportunity for us to have a strategic advantage by bringing
together diagnostics and pharma with data management. This triangle is
almost impossible for anybody else to copy,” he said in a December
interview.
Still, even Roche cannot work alone in this new world.
“You can have a big debate about whose data it is - the patient‘s, the
government‘s, the insurer’s - but one thing for sure is the
pharmaceutical company does not own it. So there’s no choice but to do
partnerships,” Schwan said.
With Apple’s latest iPhone update including a new feature allowing users
to view their medical records, Amazon teaming with Berkshire Hathaway
and JPMorgan Chase on a new healthcare company, and numerous start-ups
flooding in, the partnering opportunities are plentiful.
“You are going to see more deals,” said Susan Garfield, a partner in
EY’s life sciences advisory practice. “Data already has tremendous value
and it is going to have increasing value in future. The question is who
is going to own and capture it.”


