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2023 Global Life Sciences Outlook

Innovating and collaborating for tomorrow

The COVID-19 pandemic magnified the importance of digital advances as companies raced to meet the demand for new testing, vaccines and treatments to combat the pandemic. However, with increased competition, a shifting regulatory landscape, and growing demands from patients and health care providers, life sciences companies face significant challenges and must find ways to differentiate themselves and remain competitive.

Our 2023 Global Life Sciences Outlook explores seven trends that are expected to shape the sector. In the coming year, the focus will remain on embracing digital technologies, navigating a changing regulatory landscapes and market volatility, and addressing health inequities. By adopting the right strategies and capabilities, life sciences companies can continue to deliver value to patients, health care providers and other stakeholders.

Explore and download the key issues below:

The outlook:

Although there has been a downturn in M&A activities over the past decade, life sciences companies are poised to witness an increase in M&A values in 2023 due to increased competition and the growing demand for multi-indication pharmaceutical products.

Vaccines and next-generation treatments, such as cell gene therapy, represent new streams of revenue for life sciences companies. Meanwhile, MedTech companies are expected to divest non-core assets in order to improve their growth profiles and create opportunities for strategic acquirers.

Key takeaways:

  • Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) have proven to be lucrative options for life sciences companies looking to facilitate business transformation, create ecosystem value, and disrupt the industry. In 2023, there is expected to be a potential uptick in the value of M&A deals. One area of potential interest for acquirers is multi-indication pharma, which refers to drugs that can treat several diseases that are linked to similar causes.
  • The emergence of mRNA technology has invigorated pharmaceutical portfolios, and the outlook for mRNA vaccines includes ongoing research to develop vaccines against diseases such as HIV, Zika, and rabies, which are currently in the human trial phase.
  • Next-generation therapies, including gene editing, have proven to be a crucial area for portfolio expansion among life sciences companies. Moreover, companies are divesting assets that do not fit within their overall portfolios, restructuring, and rebalancing their portfolios to achieve the right balance for sustainable and profitable growth.

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The outlook:

According to a recent Deloitte survey, R&D innovation is one of the top actions that 91% of life sciences organizations plan to invest in during 2023 and almost half of them are optimistic about the sector’s outlook in the coming year. Despite that, there are significant financial challenges facing the success of the current high-risk, high-cost R&D model. To move past this, and to succeed in the post-pandemic world, life sciences R&D organizations need to focus on accelerating digital transformation programs, strategic shifts, and commercial reorganization.

Key takeaways:

  • Real-world evidence (RWE) helps life sciences organizations better understand disease progression, monitor patient safety, and assess clinical and cost effectiveness. During the pandemic, RWE enabled the sector to innovate faster by predicting global hotspots, collect better data from diverse racial and ethnic groups, and understand vaccine effectiveness across age, gender, race, and ethnicity.
  • Life sciences companies are using artificial intelligence (AI) to transform drug discovery by extracting concepts and relationships from data. By 2030, the time required for screening to preclinical testing will be reduced only a few months, and new potential drug candidates would be identified at more affordable prices.
  • Regulators globally are working closely with stakeholders to create clusters of technical experts, share search results, leverage inspection reports, and propagate information. Collaboration within the industry has also increased with biopharma companies and MedTech manufacturers sharing data and resources to accelerate development of vaccines and treatments.

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The outlook:

Historically, supply chain management has relied on static assumptions creating forecasts using scenarios from similar circumstances. However, in the event of unforeseen emergencies like a significant disruption in distribution channels, these forecasts might not be adequate.

With volatility related to the global pandemic, shipping and logistics-related geopolitical turmoil, and four-decade high inflation, the global life sciences sector is witnessing a shift in perspective towards supply chains. The new approach aims to increase flexibility, streamline manufacturing processes, and enhance real-time tracking. As per a Fortune/Deloitte survey, 88% of respondents cited production or logistics issues, and reduced logistics capacity, as key challenges. To mitigate these challenges, life sciences companies are adopting transformative solutions to enable proactive scenario planning and risk mitigation.

Key takeaways:

  • The lack of visibility into thousands of suppliers and their own supply chains is one of the barriers to adoption of a highly connected, agile supply network. As a result, life sciences companies are prioritizing digital governance to prevent delays, such as supply chain bottlenecks, with the use of smart sensors that provide timely feedback on operations.
  • The estimated market for pharmaceutical drug delivery is expected to grow from U$1.17 trillion in 2022 to U$1.45 trillion by 2028. The impact of this massive network is likely to be seen as an environmental adversity over the long-term. Industry-wide efforts are also underway to improve supply-chain sustainability and transparency.
  • Geopolitical threats such as trade wars, cyber risks, and inflation has led to greater interdependence of supply chains and increased their role in national security. In response, many life sciences companies are adopting using blockchain technology for anti-counterfeiting, genomic, and clinical data sharing, revenue management, and materials transfer. 

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The outlook:  

Historic global shifts, pharmaceutical reimbursement policies, and intensifying competition have led life sciences companies to adapt using dynamic pricing techniques where prices fluctuate based on real-time data such as customer demand. Pharmaceutical companies are also working towards understanding niche diseases through hyper-targeting of patient populations to ensure equitable access to treatments.

Key takeaways:

  • Life sciences companies are facing significant pricing changes under the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) in the United States that empowers Medicare, the US government’s national health insurance program, to negotiate drug prices and compels drug makers to pay inflationary rebates. To comply with the changing landscape, pharmaceutical companies will be required to evaluate the economic consequences, conduct negotiations with the government agencies and adjust customer agreements.
  • To improve clinical value, pricing, and reimbursement, life sciences companies will have to tailor decisions to regional markets. Also, they will have to focus on marketing specialized, next generation therapies in order to develop medicines for niche diseases affecting a small patient population.
  • Life sciences companies face potential legal hurdles and reputational risks while trying to increase drug access. Pharmaceutical companies need to keep up with the upcoming laws surrounding pricing transparency and equitable access. Technological advancements are likely to prove beneficial in adopting a truly value based approach.

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The outlook:

Since the pandemic, three-fourths of people around the world now have experience with at-home tests and companies are increasingly able to access, interpret, and act on the billions of patient data points. 

With more than 435,000 active clinical trials underway across the globe, and more than two million devices across more than 7,000 groups of instruments, machines, and software used for medical purposes, companies can generate insights that will help life sciences enterprises move towards patient-centricity. This involves deployment of decentralized diagnostics and direct-to-consumer channels and solutions, gathering real-world patient information, and achieving optimal patient outcomes through digital alliances.

Key takeaways:

  • Life sciences companies can now collect real-time patient data away from centralized care sites using personal devices. With the rise in patient centricity, many life sciences companies are exploring direct-to-consumer (DTC) channels enabling direct patient engagement when and where they seek it. 
  • Companies are using wearable devices to gain real-time data in a more patient friendly way. This, combined with developing new methods of utilizing big data will lead to creation of high-precision pharmaceuticals and medical care tailored to individual patients.
  • Digital partnerships will aid life sciences companies process and organize the output of data collected across diverse locations helping them enhance their patient-centric offerings.
  • Connected devices that providing prescription-based digital therapeutics are helping enhance patient-centricity by promoting medication adherence and signaling potential safety concerns.

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The outlook:

The pandemic led to many life sciences companies to digitize their operations virtually overnight. Cloud technologies and platforms enabled organizations to let their employees work remotely and collaborate,share data across third party networks, as well as run AI and machine learning (ML) algorithms. All while reducing costs, improving time-to-discovery and insight, and collecting data to improve manufacturing and supply chain operations.

The pandemic accelerated the application of digital solutions such as Software-as-a-Service, AI, Internet of Things, automation, blockchain, data lakes, wearables, AR/VR, and digital therapeutics.

Key takeaways:

  • The advantages that made digital transformation lucrative, can also lead to vulnerabilities in company’s data systems. In the past few years, the cyber-attacks on biopharma and MedTech companies have disrupted supply chain and manufacturing processes, resulting in millions of dollars in damages. In such a scenario, garnering end-user trust becomes crucial for these companies.
  • A Deloitte survey found that only 20% of biopharma companies are digitally maturing. Companies need to focus on solutions that are delivering value while enabling them to deliver improved health, wellness, and experiences for their patients; drive business impact; and inspire company employees and stakeholders.
  • For life sciences companies to achieve digital transformation and maturity, the leaders need to address the five key questions surrounding the company’s digital ambition, ways to broaden digital transformation, realizing digital value, etc.

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The outlook:

Inequities in the health system including unconscious bias, a lack of trust, language barriers, impediments to preventative therapies and devices developed to change lives from reaching people who really need them. These inequities also cost life sciences companies substantially in lost productivity annually. Life sciences companies need to develop strategies that places health equity at the heart of their business operations and extend across their organization, offerings, community, and ecosystem.

The Deloitte Health Equity Institutes partnered with the World Economic Forum (WEF) to develop the Global Health Equity Network (GHEN) to ensure health equity across businesses. As a part of this effort, Deloitte and 38 other organizations signed the signed GHEN’s Zero Health Gaps Pledge to adopt a multi-disciplinary approach to support diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs, provide accessible and quality health services, paying employees a fair wage, and investing in safe living environments.

Key takeaways:

  • Through diversified clinical trials, patients can have access to equitable access to treatments that breaks down inequality barriers. However, a lack of awareness and trust in organizations can impede trial diversity. To overcome these barriers and encourage greater participation from underserved communities, companies must provide reliable information from trusted sources within those communities.
  • To achieve health equity, leaders need to take steps to eliminate racism and other discriminatory biases rooted within the system. This would help life sciences organizations deliver quality services without disparities, attract and retain the best talent, and elevate their brand reputation.
  • Companies can promote health equity by developing strategies that focus on being intentional about serving patients without biases, forming alliances among stakeholders that work towards addressing the root causes of health inequities, tailoring products for diverse needs, promoting awareness, and building trust.

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Interested in the trends and issues impacting health care providers, health plans, and government health organisations? ­ Explore our global health care sector outlook.

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