Abstract
An assessment of inventors of US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved medicines reveals a growing role for academic entrepreneurship in general and National Institutes of Health (NIH)-supported investigators in particular. For all small-molecule therapeutics approved between 2001 and 2019 (383 in total), 8.3% listed an academic inventor in the Orange Book. Remarkably, an additional 23.8% listed an inventor from a company founded by an NIH-funded academic inventor. Over time, the relative inventive contributions from academia has progressively increased, including nearly one-third of medicines approved since 2017. These findings suggest a surging role for academic inventors and founders, perhaps in combination with a faltering of traditional private sector dominance of drug discovery.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 1905-1909 |
| Number of pages | 5 |
| Journal | Drug Discovery Today |
| Volume | 25 |
| Issue number | 11 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Nov 2020 |
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