We were on the ground at the second annual PhRMA Forum in Washington, D.C., which brought together leaders from across the health care ecosystem to discuss the hot policy topics and innovation trends impacting the biopharma industry.
One message rang clear across multiple panels: The American pharmaceutical industry is at a critical crossroads, facing significant policy headwinds and intense competition from China. It’s a make-or-break moment for American innovation.
Throughout the afternoon, many experts were critical of the stifling effect that Trump administration policies, such as most favored nation pricing and Medicare drug price cuts, have had on innovation, claiming price controls actually shift savings to middlemen rather than patients. In his opening remarks, PhRMA President and CEO Stephen Ubl noted, “As a result of the IRA, early-stage investment in small molecule medicines has plummeted by nearly 70%, and post-approval clinical trials for cancer medicines dropped 40%.”
Meanwhile, China is racing ahead of America in clinical research capacity, with the nation able to complete Phase 1 clinical trials 50% faster and 40% cheaper than the U.S. Former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb remarked during a panel, “46% of the development around mRNA vaccines right now is taking place in China, a technology that was largely invented here in the U.S.”
This rapid expansion of clinical trial capacity didn’t happen by chance. China has made biopharmaceutical R&D a national priority, triggering massive government investment and a national strategy from the Chinese government. Multiple experts at the PhRMA Forum called for similar steps to be taken by the U.S. government through incentives to support renewed investment in innovation.
Multiple speakers, including CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz and FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, also pointed to the promise of AI in helping close the innovation gap emerging between the U.S. and China. Both officials posited using AI to speed clinical trials and shorten the lengthy timeline between discovery and patient access. However, it will only be possible if reforms at the FDA come to fruition, something that remains to be seen amid the current chaotic environment at the agency.
The other hot topic of the afternoon: vaccines. Fresh off the FDA’s rejection of Moderna’s mRNA flu vaccine (that was later reversed), administration officials were asked about HHS’ seemingly growing anti-vax positioning. Both Oz and Makary doubled down on the concept of encouraging everyone to get “core vaccines,” with Oz vowing that CMS will continue to cover these vaccines in an effort to allay fears from industry and consumers alike.
One thing is clear: There is no shortage of challenges facing the biopharmaceutical industry right now. The question remains if the Trump administration and industry leaders can find enough common ground to make the investments and policy changes needed to restore America’s role as a leader in innovation.
– Bridget Walsh and Rachel Bridges