During the day-long US-India BioPharma and Healthcare Summit, top industry leaders, experts and academicians hoped that the new Indian government will bring in "predictable, transparent and pragmatic regulatory policies" which would positively change the Indian BioPharma and Healthcare Innovation landscape.
Noting a regulatory environment which is more "enabling than restrictive" is required for innovation, a position paper prepared by Pricewaterhouse coopers released at the summit organised by the USA-India Chamber of Commerce (USAIC) said.
India is well positioned to establish a significant oncology presence with respect to life cycle management, the report said.
In his message to the conference the Union Science and Technology Minister Harsh Vardhan said the success rates are low for new drug discovery and development, especially from the perspective of modern science.
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"The exorbitant cost of drug development and also the highly competitive nature of the domain leave little room for aggressive innovation. We need to find newer and innovative ways to overcome the prevailing situation," Vardhan said.
But this is one area where India can play a big role and help in reducing the cost of treatment and medicine, she said.
"Oncology is one area where patients (in India) are very keen to be part of the drug trial. Enrolment rate for cancer drug is much higher in India than in other parts of the world. This is one area where patients want to try a new drug," she added.
The major theme for discussing this year's summit was oncology, cardiovascular and metabolic disease and neurodegenerative diseases.
In his message to the summit, the Union Health Minister J P Nadda called for "out-of-the-box thinking" for innovation in healthcare.
According to the Pricewaterhouse Coopers report prepared for USAIC, Indian pharma companies are not putting sufficient capital at risk to develop breakthrough products nor are they investing heavily in novel therapeutics.