Digital Health: Does Pharma Need To Change Its Business Model To Make It Work?

By 2020, pharmaceutical business models will be turned on their head because of digital health, according to a new report by the management consultancy firm Arthur D. Little (ADL).

DNA

By 2020, pharmaceutical business models will be turned on their head because of digital health, according to a new report by the management consultancy firm Arthur D. Little (ADL).

Innovation outside the healthcare space is causing disruption to the pharmaceutical company, its strategy and the way in which it...

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on Scrip for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from Alimentary/Metabolic

Lilly Looks For Muscle-Sparing Candidates In Pact With Juvena

 
• By 

Deal Snapshot: Including its internal efforts with bimagrumab, Lilly has been seeking a muscle-sparing therapy to complement GLP-1 obesity drugs, such as Zepbound.

Novo Nordisk Teams With Deep Apple On Non-Incretin Obesity Approach

 
• By 

Novo Nordisk will partner with privately held Deep Apple to study a novel, non-incretin target that could be better suited than GLP-1s for long-term obesity treatment.

Metsera’s Amylin Analog Stars In Obesity Phase I

 
• By 

Intended as obesity monotherapy and for combination with the firm’s GLP-1 analog, MET-0233i showed best-in-class efficacy with placebo-like tolerability at low doses.

Regeneron Buys Tirzepatide-Like Product With Eye On Muscle-Preserving Combinations

 

Regeneron is bringing in its own GIP/GLP-1 agonist, establishing a path to develop proprietary obesity drug combinations with its internal muscle-sparing drugs.

More from Therapy Areas

Sarepta Market Dynamics For Elevidys Imperiled By Second Patient Death

 
• By 

With two deaths in non-ambulatory DMD patients, Sarepta is attempting damage control and will ask the US FDA to advise, setting up a possible confrontation with CBER director Prasad.

Supernus Secures Sage With CVR-Supported Deal

 

Supernus agreed to pay $561m upfront plus a contingent value right that could add $234m to buy Sage, topping a previously rejected offer from Biogen.

BMS’s Breyanzi Stands To Further Expand Broad Lymphoma Coverage

 

The drugmaker presented data at a lymphoma meeting showing strong efficacy for the CAR-T in marginal zone lymphoma, the second most common indolent lymphoma.