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What's the difference between pharmaceutical and biotechnology?

What's the difference between pharmaceutical and biotechnology?
Submitted by global_admin on

For most of us, we may not necessarily know the answer: 'What exactly is the difference between pharma and biopharma?'

So here is a basic description of the differences between the two industries:

Pharmaceutical

Working with plant and chemical based compounds, pharmaceutical companies work their magic to make medicines that cure or manage diseases, and protect us from infection. 

Pharmaceuticals include a handful of major companies that dominate the industry. While many of these firms also produce animal health products, livestock feed supplements, vitamins and a host of other goods, this profile will focus solely on their drug products used to treat human illness.

Depending on their size and strategy, pharmaceutical companies may conduct extensive research in-house or they may seek to license promising drugs from academia, other pharmaceuticals, or biotechnology companies. The latter firms are generally smaller than their big Pharma competitors, and they employ cellular and bimolecular processes to make medicines or diagnose illnesses.

Looking to hire in Pharma or Biotech? Visit our Life Sciences & Engineering recruitment page.

Biotechnology

Biotechnology is the applied knowledge of biology. It seeks to duplicate or change the function of a living cell so it will work in a more predictable and controllable way.

The biotechnology industry uses advances in genetics research to develop products for human diseases and conditions. Several biotech companies also use genetic technology to other ends, like the manipulation of crops. Biopharmaceuticals hold great promise for treating some of the most intractable medical conditions such as cancer and autoimmune disease. Biopharmaceuticals are therapeutic agents intended to treat symptoms and/or underlying causes of a variety of disorders and diseases.

The primary difference between biopharmaceuticals and traditional pharmaceuticals is the method by which the drugs are produced: The former are manufactured in living organisms such as bacteria, yeast and mammalian cells, whereas the latter are manufactured through a series of chemical synthesis.

Biopharmaceuticals are primarily developed in both academic and industrial laboratories. The commercialisation process is often funded by venture capital firms (for academic and start-ups) or drug companies. Prior to sale, drugs are assessed by the Food & Drug Administration (FDA) and other international regulatory agencies for safety and efficacy.

Biotech opportunities largely mirror those in the pharmaceutical industry. The key difference is that biotech firms are much more focused on research because they are still developing their initial products.

Biotech firms tend to expand their marketing and sales forces when, and if a viable product nears FDA approval. Biotech companies tend to be located in geographical clusters, often near prominent research universities.

Those who choose to work in this industry enjoy the very real satisfaction of knowing that they are working to produce drugs that could make a radical difference in the lives of thousands, even millions, of people.

For a list of opportunities within this area please see our dedicated Life Sciences & Engineering jobs page and please do not hesitate to get in contact with our recruitment team for a confidential discussion.