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INSIGHTS

Japan to become an R&D site for drugmakers

Japan to become an R&D site for drugmakers
Japan is increasingly winning back development operations of foreign pharmaceutical companies, thanks to regulatory changes and government efforts to create a biomedical research agency like the U.S. National Institutes of Health. Pfizer, seeking to strengthen partnerships with Japanese industry and academia, plans
Japan is increasingly winning back development operations of foreign pharmaceutical companies, thanks to regulatory changes and government efforts to create a biomedical research agency like the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

Pfizer, seeking to strengthen partnerships with Japanese industry and academia, plans to research diabetes and cancer treatments using university-held compounds, , involving doctors and scholars with Japanese drug development experience. If a school moves to set up a biotechnology venture, Pfizer will consider investing in it.

GlaxoSmithKline of the U.K. will work with JCR Pharmaceutical to develop drugs for orphan diseases. It will also work separately on product development with Chiome Bioscience, which has antibody generation technologies.

On the regulatory front, a reform expected to go into effect this year would speed approval of treatments using regenerative medicine technologies. A process that has taken more than a decade could be completed in several years.

SanBio, a startup working to develop regenerative medicine therapies using bone marrow from healthy people, moved its headquarters from the U.S. state of California to Tokyo last month. Its Japanese operations will likely focus on products to aid recovery of motor function in Parkinson's disease patients and people with traumatic brain injuries.
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