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3 Big Drugmakers Boosting Huge R&D Budgets

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Biopharma has been spending more to achieve less. According to Deloitte's eighth annual industry tracking study, research and development returns have plummeted from 10.1% in 2010 to just 3.2% last year.

Despite the disturbing trend, some of the industry's biggest spenders are boosting their R&D outlays. Last year, Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. (NYSE: BMY), Celgene Corporation (NASDAQ: CELG), and Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) raised their research and development budgets by more than $1 billion each.

Let's look at what they're doing with all that money.

Stethoscope and calculator on top of dollar bills.
Stethoscope and calculator on top of dollar bills.

Image source: Getty Images.

All about Opdivo

Bristol-Myers Squibb spent $6.4 billion on R&D last year, 30% more than a year earlier. Although the company has at least 20 novel drug candidates in clinical trials, Opdivo is the only program that soaks up more than 10% of the company's R&D budget.

Opdivo and other PD-1 blockers are highly effective treatments for some, but patients with tumors that don't express much PD-L1 generally don't respond well. Certain cancer-fighting agents appear to give Opdivo something to latch onto, which suggests that combination therapies could be much stronger than the sum of their parts.

Running big clinical trials to test Opdivo combinations isn't cheap, but it's starting to pay off. A recent interim analysis showed Opdivo plus Yervoy provided a significant survival benefit over chemotherapy for an important group of newly diagnosed lung cancer patients, even for those with PD-L1 negative tumors.

Of course, Bristol-Myers is also looking outside of its own product line, with impressive results. A combination of Nektar Therapeutics' (NASDAQ: NKTR) NKTR-214 and Opdivo shrank tumors for 26 of 36 patients in an exploratory early-stage study. Many of the most dramatic responses occurred among patients with PD-L1 negative tumors.

Don't be surprised if Bristol's R&D budget ticks higher next year, as well. The company recently signed a giant deal with Nektar to secure rights to NKTR-214 and expects to begin running further combination studies in around 20 separate indications.

Person focused on a medicine capsule.
Person focused on a medicine capsule.

Images source: Getty Images.

Replacing Revlimid

Celgene's multiple myeloma drug Revlimid racked up $8.2 billion in sales last year, but it will begin facing limited generic competition in 2022. Revlimid sales made up 63% of total revenue last year, so it's no wonder Celgene boosted its R&D budget 32% to $5.9 billion.

While Revlimid's imminent demise is tough to ignore, the extra research dollars are being put to good use. Last December, Celgene's collaboration with bluebird bio (NASDAQ: BLUE) took big steps toward cashing in on CAR-T, with stellar results for bb2121. The therapy involves reengineering a patient's own immune cells to recognize and destroy multiple myeloma, which has had outstanding results.