Orphan Drug Designation

Definition

A regulatory status granted to drugs developed to treat rare diseases affecting small patient populations, providing incentives such as market exclusivity (7 years in the US, 10 years in the EU), tax credits on clinical trial costs, and reduced regulatory fees. Orphan drug designation significantly enhances the economic value of a pharma intangible asset by creating protected market positions.

Complementary Terms

Concepts that frequently appear alongside Orphan Drug Designation in practice.

Blockbuster Drug

A pharmaceutical product that generates annual revenue exceeding $1 billion, representing a transformational commercial success for its manufacturer. Blockbuster drugs — such as statins, biologics for autoimmune diseases, and oncology treatments — drive the majority of pharmaceutical industry profits and are among the most valuable intangible assets in existence.

Generic Drug

A pharmaceutical product that contains the same active ingredient, dosage form, strength, and route of administration as an originator (branded) drug and is demonstrated to be bioequivalent. Generic drugs can be manufactured and marketed after the expiry of the originator's patent protection and regulatory exclusivity periods.

Drug Approval

The regulatory process by which a pharmaceutical product receives authorisation for commercial sale, granted by agencies such as the FDA (US), EMA (EU), and MHRA (UK). Drug approval requires demonstration of safety, efficacy, and manufacturing quality through preclinical studies and clinical trials.

Clinical Trial Phases

The sequential stages of human testing required before a new drug or medical device can receive regulatory approval. Phase I assesses safety in a small group, Phase II evaluates efficacy and dosing, Phase III confirms effectiveness in large populations, and Phase IV involves post-market surveillance.

Pharma Pipeline

The portfolio of drug candidates at various stages of research, development, and regulatory approval within a pharmaceutical or biotechnology company. The pharma pipeline is a critical intangible asset, with each compound's value dependent on its probability of regulatory approval, expected market size, patent protection remaining, and development costs to completion.

Regulatory Approval (as Intangible Asset)

The authorisation granted by a government or regulatory body permitting a company to manufacture, market, or sell a product or service in a specific jurisdiction. Regulatory approvals — including drug approvals (FDA, EMA), financial service licences (FCA, MAS), telecommunications licences, and environmental permits — are recognised as contract-based intangible assets in purchase price allocations under IFRS 3 and ASC 805 when they arise from contractual or legal rights.

Digital Health

The convergence of digital technologies with healthcare, encompassing telemedicine, electronic health records, wearable devices, AI-assisted diagnostics, digital therapeutics, and health data analytics. Digital health companies create significant intangible asset value through proprietary algorithms, patient data assets, regulatory approvals, and clinical evidence — all of which require specialist valuation approaches.

Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS)

A U.S. tax provision allowing investors in qualifying small businesses to exclude a portion of capital gains from federal taxation upon the sale of stock held for more than five years.

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