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Calendar of Events

August 2008
COMS-Commercialization of Micro and Nano Systems Conference
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico - Aug. 31- Sept. 4
September 2008
Society for the Advancement of Material and Process Engineering (SAMPE) Fall Conference
Memphis, Tenn - Sept. 8-11
ISPE Conference on Quality by Design/Design Space
Manchester, UK - Sept. 15 - 18
"Inspiring Engineering" Application Workshops for High-Performance Electronics Design by Ansoft
U.S., Asia, Europe - Sept. 18 - Nov. 12
AFS Infrastruture, Sustainability, and Testing Management Conference
Charlotte, N.C - Sept. 22-25
American Filtration & Separations Society Fall Conference Workshop
Charlotte, NC - September 22-25
New Jersey Training Series
Somerset, N.J - Sept. 22 -25
5th International Conference on Geographic Information Science
Park City, Utah - Sept. 23-26
MME 2008-19th Workshop
Aachen, Germany - Sept. 28-30
October 2008
22nd International Activated Carbon Conference
Pittsburgh, PA - October 7-8
Comsol Conference 2008
Boston, MA - October 9-11
24th Asilomar Conference on Mass Spectrometry
Pacific Grove, California - Oct 10-14
104th Gulf Coast Conference
Galveston, Texas - Oct 14-15
ASCP Annual Meeting
Baltimore, MD - Oct 16-19
AVS International Symposium and Exhibition
Boston, MA - Oct 19-24
Convergence 2008
Detroit, MI - Oct 20-22
Discovery2Diagnostics Conference & Exhibition
San Diego, CA - October 20-22
ISPE 2008 Annual Meeting
Boca Raton, Fla - Oct. 26 - 29
Bio Investor Forum 2008
San Francisco, CA - Oct 29-31
November 2008
2008 Healthcare Design Conference
Washington, D.C. - Nov. 8 -11
58th American Society of Human Genetics Meeting
Philadelphia, PA - Nov 11-15
Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting
Washington, D.C. - Nov 15-19
AAPS Annual Meeting and Exposition
Atlanta, GA - Nov 16-20
17th William T. Pecora Memorial Remote Sensing Symposium
Denver, CO - Nov 17-20
EAS 2008
Somerset, NJ - Nov 17-20
ISPE San Diego Training Series
San Diego, Calif - Nov. 17 - 20
December 2008
2008 MRS Fall Meeting
Boston, MA - Dec 1-5
ISPE Conference on Risk Management
Barcelona, Spain - Dec. 1 - 4
Science and the Emerging Bioeconomy for Executives
Scottsdale, AZ - Dec 3-5
American Society for Cell Biology
San Francisco, CA - Dec 13-17





Editor's Take
Paul Livingstone: Senior Editor, R&D Magazine
An antidote for pharma’s malady
Aug. 27, 2008

Does anyone really understand big pharma? I’m sure many do, but to me, an outsider mostly interested in the technologies used for the basic R&D of the drugs in question, I’m struck by how the industry seems to thrive on insatiable momentum.

For the last year it seems, stock analysts have been waving caution signs in front of investors about the inability of pharmaceuticals to develop new drugs to replace those that pass along to the generics market. As generics take over the marketplace, the big dogs like Sanofi-Aventis, Merck, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer (it’s amazing how many of them spring up isn’t it?) must get new drugs approved as soon as possible. Why? Well, development costs are spectacular and the investments must pay.

These days, the U.S. Patent Office and the Federal Drug Administration are sometimes considered the toughs that put the choke hold what used to be a lucrative product avenue: apply for a patent, file continuations on the patent, conduct clinical trials, wait for FDA approval. But the approvals aren’t coming along like they used to, thanks to heightened concerns over drug safety. And the U.S. Patent Office is tired of spending time dealing with continuation filing. They’ve got a hard enough time dealing with a record number of patent filings of all kinds.

So then, it’s a grim spectacle and it gets worse when one takes into account the sheer portability of a drug product, which seems tailor-made for exploitation via an online black market. More than 3,000 online sellers of major pharma products have been identified. So lucrative are these fake pharmas that the practice has been dubbed “brandjacking”.

Without a constant flow of product pouring through the drug pipeline, big pharma’s thirst is never quenched. So where do they go? The answer is biotechnology, and through a number of promising new therapeutic innovations—from imaging systems to targeted nanoparticle drug delivery tools—big pharma has moved away from what was once a realm of high-profile IPOs to a wave of high-profile M&As and licensing agreements.

It’s an impressive adaptation that has kept the ball rolling for these companies even in the face of economic gloom.

And it’s been good for science in general. Biotech firms that might never have attracted necessary investment in a time of evaporated capital now have a cash cow ready and willing to get it hands on any product, as long as its one they can market and sell quickly.

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