Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
Paradoxes and innovation processes Paradoxes and innovation processes in biotechnology & biomedicinein biotechnology & biomedicine
Policy concernsPolicy concerns
Global Competition in High Tech Global Competition in High Tech Sectors, Nov. 2007 Lecturer: Sectors, Nov. 2007 Lecturer:
Astrid SzogsAstrid Szogs
It is gratefully acknowledged that the slides were provided by It is gratefully acknowledged that the slides were provided by
Annika Rickne.Annika Rickne.
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
Definition of biotechDefinition of biotech
Biotech as a knowledge field• The application of knowledge about living organisms and
their components & characteristics into industrial products & processes
• Included knowledge fields: molecular biology, genomics, proteomics, bioinformatics, etc.
• What to include in biotech changes over time
Biotech as an industrial sector • Firms focusing specifically on these knowledge fields:
Dedicated Biotech Firms (DBF)
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
Biotech
Medical technology
Instruments
Pulp & paper Food
Chemistry
Agriculture
Pharmaceuticals
Environment Materials
Biotech influences many sectors
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
Sometimes Biotech = bioscience = bio-xSometimes Biotech = bioscience = bio-x
Biotech
Bioinformatics
Biomedical engineering
BioMaterials
Bioinformatics
Biotech = bioscience = bio-xBiotech = bioscience = bio-x
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
Definition of biomedicine Definition of biomedicine
Medical technologyInstruments Pharmaceuticals
Biotech
Bioinformatics
Biomedical engineering
BioMaterials
BioinformaticsKnowledge fields
Sectors
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
Paradox 1Paradox 1
• Different definitions, operationalizations• DBF vs all types of firms• Biotech vs biomedicine vs bioscience
• Statistics & measurement• Measuring change within a region/country• Comparisons between countries
• Causal relations
• Focused field but still lack of facts
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Paradox 2Paradox 2• Controversies whether commercialization of biotech is ’good
or bad’• Ethics: sources of stem cells• Safety: use of xeno-material• Modification of nature: GMO• Public knowledge or appropriation: ownership of cells• Equality: who to donate to, welfare diseases
• These are balanced against needs and outcome• User needs: Parkinson, Altzheimers• Economic growth: High hopes• Attracting talent: Interesting research environments
• There are many concerns that need to be balanced• Region and countries take different roads• Policy actors play major role & also firms, universities, researchers,
media, etc.
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Paradox 3: S&T vs market as driversParadox 3: S&T vs market as driversScience & technology driven– Knowledge base: areas of scientific & technological knowledge – Embodied in techniques & instruments – As knowledge evolves borders are blurred– Driven by possibilities in S&T– Driven by researchers & engineers
User driven– Societal debates– Innovations developed in close interaction with medical doctors and patients– Examples:
– Nobel Biocare: Brånemark implants– Focal: Biodegradable gel
Innovations emerge from uncertain, complex processes involving knowledge and markets.
• Development of science-technology-application-market intertwined• Co-evolution
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Paradox 4: Paradox 4: High hopes but slow returnHigh hopes but slow return
• High hopes of meeting user needs and creating economic growth• Most countries have a biotech policy for growth
• India: US$ 5 billion, 1 M jobs by 2010
• Regenerative medicine: cure diabetes, increase life span
• But not so much realized so far?• Examples:
Tissue engineeringPharma
• How fast and radical change can we expect?
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CASE: Regenerative medicine To help the body heal itself
Replace - implant new organ
Repair - add new cells to organ
Regenerate - stimulate cell renewal
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ChallengesChallenges
• Research• Complex multi-disciplinary approach • In vitro viability versus in vivo function• Determine primary pharmacology and dosing• Availability of animal (disease) model• What constitutes clinical success ?
• Products• Firm experience of how to get products to the market• Some products on the market
• Production• Living organisms : preservation of viability• Biodistribution and half-life of cells • The batch size of one• What constitutes GMP ?• Traceability processes• Sources• Large scale?
Rickne and Sandström, 2006
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
ChallengesChallenges
• Regulatory issues• Technology and clinical therapy evolving faster than regulation and
standardization of processes• Protect patients • Quality Safety and Efficacy• Classification not clear• A political process• Collaboration between public health authorities and private enterprise• Will it be too costly? • Fast reaction needed!! • “One man cannot hold another man down in the ditch without
remaining down in the ditch with him” Booker T Washington.• Ethics/Precautionary Principle
• Media coverage• Creating debate (Nancy Regan)• Ethical issues:
Who to donate to?Stem cells: Which source?
Rickne and Sandström, 2006
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
ChallengesChallenges
• To handle the customer hesitancy & the regulatory issues• Gradually introduce the technology
• Reimbursement • convincing clinical data• public acceptance • demand for therapy.
• Firms & investors• Clear route needed: regulation, business models, reimbursement
• Societal gains• Who should make money?
Rickne and Sandström, 2006
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
CASE: Biotech in pharmaCASE: Biotech in pharma• Science: genomics, combinatorial chemistry, etc.• Pharma:
• Increasing development cost• Shift towards blockbuster drugs• Declining R&D productivity
• Biological products: therapeutic proteins (partly due to fast track approval)
• Role of biotech: • identification of drug targets• understand human body• tools for development• Speed up process?• new sector created & pharma restructured, new division of labor• More drugs in development by DBF + Big pharma • drugs for unmet clinical needs (<15 since 1980)
Hopkins et al, 2006
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CASE: Biotech in pharmaCASE: Biotech in pharmaBut
• slower to validate targets• hard to transfer knowledge from academia to industry• translational process difficult• targets identified with genomics has so far lower success rate• R&D productivity still declining (more difficult: infectious to
cronic diseases?)• Time lags?
Pattern of technological change (Rosenberg, 1979, von Tunzelmann, 1993)
• Revolutionary science & incremental technological change• Technology often primitive when introduced & require high
investment for improvement • Biotech first process technology• Complementary innovations• Large technical change in some parts of DD process but not
overall
Hopkins et al, 2006
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Biotech in pharmaBiotech in pharma
Organizational & institutional change needed• Organizational change of drug discovery process & clinical practice
• New regulation needed
• Adapt to clinical procedure (clinical trials, economic assessment, etc.)
• Managerial ability
Policy:• Funding of public R&D: yes but not expect fast or direct returns
• Much focus on technology transfer, start ups, etc.
• Link goals (e.g. improved health) to policy instruments
• Understand time scales & mechanisms
• The ’hype’ as a way to speed up the process & acquire resources?
• Correct statistics
Hopkins et al, 2006
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Refuting the linear view of innovation : Refuting the linear view of innovation : Innovations emerge from uncertain, complex processes Innovations emerge from uncertain, complex processes
involving knowledge and marketsinvolving knowledge and markets
• Incremental technological change• Science investment as a crucial ingredient
• Conclusion not to downsize S&T investment• Only indirect link to industrial growth• Mechanisms: labor mobility, informal collaboration, etc
• Internal firm & university capabilities• Resources & complementary assets & ability to obtain
resources in markets and networks
• Organizational & Institutional change needed
Paradox 5: Regulation both costly and wanted Regulation both costly and wanted
CASE: Tissue engineering & the regulatory gapCASE: Tissue engineering & the regulatory gap
Astrid Szogs & Annika Rickne
Firm opportunities?
First firms in artificial skin products• not strongly regulated• large freedom, • first mover advantages, • communication with regulatory units, • uncertainty• betting on the development
Today firms demand • clear regulation• transparency• converngence between countries
Astrid Szogs & Annika Rickne
Regulatory patchwork in EURegulatory patchwork in EU•Innovative medical technologies, including TE products do not fit into the existing regulatory frameworks•In EU, there is a lack of a harmonized regulatory framework for TE products •This leads to a regulatory patchwork within EU•Now in process of harmonization
Astrid Szogs & Annika Rickne
Constructing the TE regulation in Europe
• Dimensions underlying the construction of regulation• Scientific: origin of cells
• Industrial: production volume and frequency
• Historic: Building on existing regulation
• A structure under change• The division of responsibility between the national and the supra-
national levels are under change
• Choice of legal instrument – regulation - set framework for the change process : new rules will have to be implemented in all member states
• A negotiation process • The double role of policy
• Time spans
• Actors, negotiations and power structures
Astrid Szogs & Annika Rickne
ConclusionsConclusions• Institutional change (here ex regulation) important for
innovation • constrain or facilitate innovativeness, • provide stability, • facilitate and control the emergence of markets• facilitate exchange at markets,• empower actors, • not neutral but different missions, • different efficiency levels
• Institutions are dynamic • Developed historically, path-dependent• Involve social groups, coordination & power systems
Astrid Szogs & Annika Rickne
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
Paradox 6: Global knowledge flows & very local & clusteredParadox 6: Global knowledge flows & very local & clustered
CASE: CASE: CCommercialization of human biobanksommercialization of human biobanks
• deCode Genetics, Iceland, Oxagen, UK, UmanGenomics, Sweden
• Innovation process as iterative, uncertain and complex: not linear • multi-scientific and multi-technological• only initial stage of innovation process • various aspects of a drug interdependent and shaped interactively and
simultaneously
• Process shared over several actors• SMEs intermediaries, integrating • High R&D costs, VC, large samples• Regulation directs who can appropriate • Firms played different roles in networks• Small firms loose out? Takes time, big pharma hesitant
Rickne, Laage-Hellman, McKelvey 2006
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
Clinicalgenomicscompany
Universities Hospitals
Sample donors
Researchethics
committees
Biotech supplyfirms
Governmentagencies
Pharmaceutical anddiagnostics firms
Researchfinanciers
Venture capitalfims
Other biotechfirms
Rickne, Laage-Hellman, McKelvey 2006
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
Knowledge sharing in networksVarious linkages exist among diverse actors in innovation processes, where
the firm plays a particularly important role• Multitude of diverse actors compete and interact• The firm as an organisational form is crucial to assemble the capabilities needed for
exploiting knowledge within biotech, engaging in research as well as commercialising over time in an iterative fashion.
• Science-driven: scientists, universities and industrial R&D labs key actors.• User inputs crucial.• Resource flows & knowledge sharing in networks crucial
Organization of knowledge sharing• Geographically close relations important• Institutional structure set frame & regions/countries differ in propensity to share &
diffuse• However: not always delimited by geography• Embedded in professional networks and global knowledge pipelines • Global industry & knowledge markets
Policy: move from cluster focus to understanding of mechanisms of knowledge sharing in each specific instance
Rickne, Laage-Hellman, McKelvey 2006
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
Policy needs to handle the paradoxes
1. Clear & comparable definitions, operationalizations, indicators and statistics
2. The triple role of policy: Societal concerns vs. patient needs vs. economic growth
3. S&T vs market as drivers of innovation
4. High hopes but slow return
5. Regulation costly and wanted
6. Global knowledge flows & very local & clustered
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
Policy concernsPolicy concerns
Who takes care of policy?• Definition of policy & role of government
What level?• Global-supranational -national- regional -local
Specific vs. general?
Policy instruments
• investment in basic and applied sciences
• stimulation of (academic) entrepreneurship
• support of regional clusters
• Etc.
Who has the recipe?US leader – Europe lagging? • In comparison with the USA more biotech firms in EU but smaller firms
and less revenues:USA (2001): 1453 firms, 141000 empl, $25 billon revenuesEU: 1879 firms, 34000 empl, $7,5 billon revenues
• Main market is US (e.g. 80% of biomedical products)
The evolution of the biotech sector in the USA • In rich resource environment (California)
• Key scientists• Funding of science• Breakthroughs + Scientific competition & collaboration• Large firms + Knowledge flows between new firms & scientists• University policy & attitudes
• Dominating user industries: Close contact with both science and users• Financing through VC and stock market• Cooperation & networking crucial
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
Questions raisedQuestions raised
• Are these true facts ? Definitions and statistics?
• Does US generate more & higher quality research? Why?• Is US better at commercializing? Why?• Does the US have a well functioning institutional set-up?
• Should EU imitate the leader? Is there a best practice model?
Annika Rickne, CIRCLE
ReadingsReadings• Hopkins, M., Martin, P., Nightingale, P., Kraft, A., Mahdi, S. (2006) The myth of
the biotech revolution: An assessment of technological, clinical and organisational change, WP, SPRU.
• McMeekin, A., Harvey, M. and Gee, S. (2004): Emergent bioinformatics and newly distributed innovation processes, in McKelvey, M., A. Rickne and J. Laage-Hellman (Eds), The Economic Dynamics of Modern Biotechnologies: Europe in Global Trends, Edward Elgar Publishing Co.
• McKelvey, M., Rickne, A. and Laage-Hellman, J. (2004): Stylized facts about innovation processes in modern biotechnology, WP.
• Orsenigo, L., Pammolli, F., Riccaboni, M., Bonnaccorsi, A. and Turchetti, G. (1998): The evolution of knowledge and the dynamics of an industry network, Journal of Management and Governance, 1, 147-175.
• Powell, W W., K. W. Koput, L. Smith-Doerr (1996): “Interorganizational Collaboration and the Locus of Innovation: Networks of Learning in Biotechnology”, Administrative Science Quarterly, Vol. 41, No. 1.
• Prevezer, M. (2001): Ingredients in the Early Development of the U.S. Biotechnology Industry, Small Business Economics, 17, 17-29.
• Szogs, A. and Rickne, A. (2006): Institutional change as a process of negotiation: The case of European regulation for tissue engineering, Globelics India 2006: Innovation Systems for Competitiveness and Shared Prosperity in Developing Countries, Trivandrum, India, Oct 4-7.