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Pharmaceutical Executive November 1, 2012 |
Pharm Exec's 2013 Pipeline Report In this year's report, Ben Comer reveals that drug approvals are up, as new discoveries in biology peel away symptomology to expose underlying causes. |
Pharmaceutical Executive November 1, 2014 Josh Baxt |
2015 Pipeline Report: Burning Bright The science of drug discovery is back on script and the stars are cued up for a new generation of breakthrough therapies. |
Pharmaceutical Executive December 1, 2011 Ben Comer |
Pharm Exec's 2012 Pipeline Report It's a neck and neck race toward safer, faster, and medically superior treatments. Which organizations have what it takes to jockey their products into the winner's circle? |
Pharmaceutical Executive December 1, 2010 Walter Armstrong |
The Next Wave: Pharm Exec's 2011 Pipeline Report 42 of the best new drugs in development or parked at the FDA |
Pharmaceutical Executive December 1, 2008 Ron Feemster |
The 2008 Pipeline Report We scrub industry's pipeline to find the drugs that everyone will be talking about in 2009 and beyond. |
Pharmaceutical Executive December 1, 2005 Ron Feemster |
The PharmExec 2005 Pipeline Report Dry? Not quite. Instead of 1990s-style blockbusters, pharma's new molecules are niche drugs, cancer treatments and -- at last -- innovative mechanisms for troublesome targets: Acomplia [rimonabant] by Sanofi-Aventis... AMG 162 [denosumab] by Amgen... etc. |
Pharmaceutical Executive December 1, 2006 |
Pipeline 32 compounds that are the early fruit of pharma's investment in targeted drug design. |
Pharmaceutical Executive July 1, 2011 Dickmeyer & Rosenbeck |
From Rut to Racetrack Can the pharmaceutical industry deliver on its objective to make cancer a curable, chronic condition? |
Pharmaceutical Executive July 1, 2011 |
Precious Mettle Taking Onyx Pharmaceuticals to new heights: CEO Tony Coles talks about the midsize company's transition from adolescence to adulthood. |
Chemistry World December 17, 2015 Sarah Houlton |
Pills, prices and politics Pharmaceutical pricing has been a hot topic in 2015, with the drugs bill continuing to rise as costly new treatments reach the market. |
Investment Advisor December 2005 Greg B. Scott |
Buying The Future Prudent investing in biotechnology can offer great returns for clients. It's also the wave of the future. Armed with a basic understanding of the dynamics of the industry and the valuation inflection points, intelligent investors can make significant returns. |
Chemistry World June 12, 2014 Andy Extance |
Pharma vies to unleash immune system power on cancer Drug firms are investing heavily in clinical trials and collaborations as they seek to capitalize on the potential of cancer therapies that enlist or enhance our immune systems' ability to fight tumors. |
BusinessWeek June 13, 2005 Catherine Arnst |
Biotech, Finally The past 30 years of biological discoveries, insights into the human genome, and exotic chemical manipulation have unleashed a wave of biological drugs, many of them reengineered human proteins. |
Bio-IT World October 10, 2003 Kevin Davies |
Iressa's Trials and Tribulations The Iressa experience highlights the enormous stakes surrounding breakthrough therapies. |
Pharmaceutical Executive May 1, 2011 Cacciotti & Clinton |
12th Annual Pharm Exec 50 Pharm Exec's annual run-down of the world's biggest pharma companies. |
The Motley Fool February 17, 2004 David Nierengarten |
Antisense Making Sense? An update on Genasense, its future, and how the antisense marketplace is shaping up. The FDA has agreed to review the new drug applications. |
Pharmaceutical Executive September 1, 2013 Stan Bernard |
The Drug Combination Competition Companies are leveraging combinations of drugs and other products to gain competitive advantage and market share. |
Pharmaceutical Executive May 1, 2007 Patrick Clinton |
The Topic of Cancer What will tomorrow's cancer commercialization model really look like? We asked four heavyweights from the world of oncology what they thought. |
Pharmaceutical Executive September 1, 2008 |
Place Your Bets The pharmaceutical industry is changing. Here are eight seminal events that describe how. |
Nurse Practitioner February 2012 Jennifer M. Belavic |
Annual drug update 2011 in review Many new medications were approved throughout 2011. This article will cover a variety of drugs that will be useful in nurse practitioner practice |
Pharmaceutical Executive December 1, 2010 Walter Armstrong |
Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer: Targeting Pathways and Patients Although the most common cancer worldwide, lung cancer remains poorly treated, with the highest mortality rate. |
The Motley Fool March 1, 2007 Brian Lawler |
Know Your Drug Stock ABCs: Part 2 Investing in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries can be difficult. Here are terms investors should know to better understand how the clinical trial process involved with bringing a drug to market works. |
Registered Rep. February 1, 2005 Bob Hirschfeld |
Healing Investments New lung cancer drugs mean good news in both the doctor's office and on Wall Street. |
Chemistry World April 17, 2008 Nuala Mora |
World's first therapeutic cancer vaccine approved In move that will be a fillip to cancer vaccine developers, US biotech Antigenics has won Russian approval to market Oncophage to treat kidney cancer. |
The Motley Fool November 29, 2011 Brian Orelli |
Winners and Losers of Roche's Avastin Woes What the FDA giveth, the FDA can taketh away. |
Pharmaceutical Executive December 1, 2010 Walter Armstrong |
Cancer: On Target Once More Over the past year or two, a handful of Phase III failures, including megablockbusters like Avastin and Sutent in trials for all kinds of common tumors, indicate that targeted therapy is generally a blunt instrument. |
Pharmaceutical Executive March 1, 2013 Ben Comer |
Brand of the Year: Januvia When Merck's Januvia received its first regulatory approval, in Mexico in 2006, no one predicted its long-term success. In 2012, the company's diabetes franchise became the highest-selling product family in Merck's 122-year history. |
The Motley Fool January 11, 2005 Charly Travers |
The Future of Cancer Vaccines Biotech companies developing cancer vaccines have been in investors' doghouses for a long time. Can a vaccine help stave off forms of the disease? |
The Motley Fool July 1, 2011 Alex Crawford |
3 Biotech Drugs With Promising Phase III Data, Moving Into FDA Review Do these drugs have a chance of FDA approval? |
The Motley Fool April 19, 2004 Charly Travers |
4 Promising Biotech IPOs Several recently gone-public biotechs boast surprisingly interesting drug pipelines. From drugs for hepatitis to hopeful cancer treatments, watch out for these four biotech debutantes. If trials go smoothly, they may be the next up-and-coming stocks in the industry. |
Pharmaceutical Executive October 1, 2008 Joanna Breitstein |
The D-Mab Men Amgen's salvation just may be denosumab. We sit down to talk with the head scientists driving the drug for the multi-billion dollar osteoporosis market |
Chemistry World July 3, 2015 Andy Extance |
Pharma queues up for checkpoint inhibitor collaborations Amid fierce rivalries over the latest generation of cancer treatments, drug makers have been weaving a complex web of collaborations on combination therapies spanning much of the pharmaceutical industry. |
The Motley Fool February 8, 2011 Esterhuizen & Sellitti |
Battle of the Bulge: Biotech Takes on Obesity and Diabetes Will recent advances in pharmaceutical research revolutionize the weight loss industry? It's still early days, but here are some of the stocks to watch. |
The Motley Fool July 8, 2008 Brian Lawler |
Blockbuster Drugs Bound for Extinction? One of the biggest classes of prescription drugs, those for diabetes treatments, faces tougher FDA standards. |
The Motley Fool March 30, 2010 Brian Orelli |
Invest in This Space at Your Own Risk Lung cancer is a tough foe for drugmakers. |
Pharmaceutical Executive February 1, 2013 William Looney |
Pathways to Progress Cancer is increasingly understood as a collection of rare and mostly treatable conditions rather than the impregnable, monolith portrayed in popular culture. Industry experts review current and pending efforts to turn great science into good practice. |
Pharmaceutical Executive June 1, 2007 |
Thoughtleader: Stephen Sherwin, Cell Genesys Cell Genesys has been able to raise enough capital to gamble on what it CEO believes could be the future's most promising therapies, including gene activation, immunotherapy, and oncolytic virus therapy. |
Pharmaceutical Executive December 1, 2005 Alana Klein |
Thought Leader: A Q&A with Graham Allaway While researchers continue to hunt for new AIDS drugs, Graham Allaway, chief operating officer of Panacos Pharmaceuticals, is focusing on developing a treatment for patients failing therapy due to resistance. |
The Motley Fool December 3, 2004 W.D. Crotty |
One Hot Biotech Stock Biomira reports favorable Phase II test results, sending the stock up 146%. |
Chemistry World January 6, 2015 Sarah Houlton |
Riding new waves Global annual spending on medicines is set to top $1 trillion for the first time in 2014, having ended 2013 just shy of that figure at $989 billion. |
Pharmaceutical Executive October 1, 2005 |
Changing Diabetes An interview with Novo Nordisk's president of U.S. operations Martin Soeters on how a nation that leads the world in diabetes research does such a poor job of treating it. Here, he offers some solutions. |
HHMI Bulletin Nov 2010 Amy Maxmen |
Driving the Immune System to Attack Cancer A researcher's longtime efforts to drive T cells to attack tumors hits pay dirt. |
BusinessWeek August 26, 2010 Tom Randall |
Cocktails Are Next For Cancer-Drug Makers Taking a cue from the cocktails of drugs that have made AIDS survivable, drugmakers are pursuing combination therapies against cancer. |
The Motley Fool December 31, 2010 Brian Orelli |
2010 FDA Approvals and a Look Ahead Recent history can help us handicap FDA decisions. |
Bio-IT World May 2006 Kevin Davies |
Personalized Medicine's Rosy Picture GlaxoSmithKline's head of genetics research, Allen Roses, says that pharmacogenetics is having a profound impact on the stratifying of patients, the minimization of adverse events, and the expedited passage of drug candidates through clinical trials. |
Managed Care June 2007 Thomas Morrow |
Dendritic Cell Vaccine Hits FDA Roadblock Questions about study design and analysis prompted the FDA to postpone action on Provenge, a treatment for advanced prostate cancer. |
Pharmaceutical Executive July 30, 2007 |
Tomorrow's Drugs A look at the seven top therapies and technologies vying to deliver the next generation of drugs. |
Reason Aug/Sep 2007 Kerry Howley |
Dying for Lifesaving Drugs Will desperate patients destroy the pharmaceutical system that produces tomorrow's treatments? |
Managed Care May 2004 Thomas Morrow |
New Agents Regulating Tyrosine Kinase Can Be Used Against Several Cancers When traditional therapies fail in cancer treatment, turning off a chemical switch may offer hope to the hopeless. |
The Motley Fool June 21, 2007 Brian Orelli |
Dumpster Diving in Pfizer's Trash Investors are probably overreacting to Pfizer's decision, but only time -- and clinical trials -- will tell. |