Pharmaceutical firms are extremely selective in deciding which patented drug candidates are taken up into clinical development, given the high costs and risks involved. We argue that the scientific base of drug candidates, and who was responsible for that scientific research, are key antecedents of take-up into clinical trials and whether the patent owner ('internal take-up') or another firm ('external take-up') leads the clinical development effort. We hypothesize that patented drug candidates that refer to scientific research are more likely to be taken up in development, and that in-house conducted scientific research is predominantly associated with internal take-up due to the ease of knowledge transfer within the firm. Examining 18,360...
search and drug development ” (19 May, p. 997), we strongly believe that investing in academic drug ...
What are the respective roles of the public and private sectors in drug development? This question i...
This paper examines the proposition that during competence-destroying technological changes, incumbe...
Pharmaceutical firms are extremely selective in deciding which patented drug candidates are taken up...
This paper compares the innovation performance of established pharmaceutical firms and biotech compa...
This paper compares the innovation performance of established pharmaceutical firms and biotech compa...
Thesis (S.M.)--Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, 2006.Includes bibliographical...
Discovering new uses for drugs that are already on the market seems like it ought to be the low-lyin...
Support for new drug development has taken some interesting turns in current patent law jurisprudenc...
textabstractThis study analyses 1400 research projects of the top 20 R&D-spending pharmaceuticals to...
Abstract Both the public and the private sectors contribute to research and development (R&D) in...
This paper aims at characterizing the dynamics of R&D competition within the pharmaceutical domain, ...
Empirical contributions to the debate over the commercialization of the life sciences are as rich in...
The public nature of science may lead to the simplistic conclusion that firms can at no cost avail o...
This paper empirically investigates the determinants of R&D diversification strategies in the drug i...
search and drug development ” (19 May, p. 997), we strongly believe that investing in academic drug ...
What are the respective roles of the public and private sectors in drug development? This question i...
This paper examines the proposition that during competence-destroying technological changes, incumbe...
Pharmaceutical firms are extremely selective in deciding which patented drug candidates are taken up...
This paper compares the innovation performance of established pharmaceutical firms and biotech compa...
This paper compares the innovation performance of established pharmaceutical firms and biotech compa...
Thesis (S.M.)--Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, 2006.Includes bibliographical...
Discovering new uses for drugs that are already on the market seems like it ought to be the low-lyin...
Support for new drug development has taken some interesting turns in current patent law jurisprudenc...
textabstractThis study analyses 1400 research projects of the top 20 R&D-spending pharmaceuticals to...
Abstract Both the public and the private sectors contribute to research and development (R&D) in...
This paper aims at characterizing the dynamics of R&D competition within the pharmaceutical domain, ...
Empirical contributions to the debate over the commercialization of the life sciences are as rich in...
The public nature of science may lead to the simplistic conclusion that firms can at no cost avail o...
This paper empirically investigates the determinants of R&D diversification strategies in the drug i...
search and drug development ” (19 May, p. 997), we strongly believe that investing in academic drug ...
What are the respective roles of the public and private sectors in drug development? This question i...
This paper examines the proposition that during competence-destroying technological changes, incumbe...