Upcoming Login Downtime

We're updating the Biocentury.com platform login experience to make access more secure and reliable. As part of this update, logins will be temporarily unavailable on Sunday, March 16, from 4:00AM to 4:00PM GMT. We recognize the inconvenience and appreciate your understanding. Please check back after the maintenance period.

For updates, questions, or issues, please call us at +1 650-552-4224 or email us at support@biocentury.com.

BioCentury
ARTICLE | Editor's Commentary

Biotech’s public policy pillars are crumbling

The U.S. preeminence in life sciences at risk

December 15, 2023 10:16 PM UTC

The pace of biomedical advances over the past three decades has been stunning. The biotech industry’s explosive growth has brought society effective therapies for AIDS, many kinds of cancer, cystic fibrosis, hepatitis C, rare diseases, obesity and sickle cell disease, to name a few. Products based on ideas that seemed ludicrous or impossibly audacious 20 years ago — using mRNA to smuggle proteins into human cells, editing genomes, harnessing the body’s immune system to combat cancer — are being integrated into routine care.

The buzz around Kendall Square and Sand Hill Road, the hundreds of billions of dollars NIH has invested in basic research, and FDA’s reputation as the “gold standard” for drug regulation all underscore U.S. leadership. ...

Get Unlimited Access
Continue reading with a free trial.
Or Purchase This Article