AI Drug Firm Recursion Wants to Be the Amazon Prime of Pharma
AI drug developer Recursion Pharmaceuticals Inc. is considering an Amazon Prime-style subscription model for selling its pipeline of medicines.
The Salt Lake City-based biotech wants to create a system where a US employer could pay, for example, $45 a month per employee to access any medicine Recursion develops regardless of price — provided it’s prescribed by a doctor. If successful, the move has the potential to revolutionize how drugs are sold.
“We’re going to build the Amazon Prime of this industry,” Chief Executive Officer Chris Gibson told Bloomberg at the company’s office in King’s Cross, London. Recursion, which has a market value of $3 billion, has been talking about the proposal with some of its larger investors for several years, he said.
It faces major hurdles, requiring changes across the US health system and eliminating many players involved in decisions around drug pricing, insurance and access to new medicines. With no drugs close to market, Recursion also likely has several years before it could implement the idea.
Still, Recursion has form on trying things differently. It is using artificial intelligence and automation to test compounds, to try to speed up development and trial of new medicines to treat conditions such as cancer and rare diseases.
Building a Portfolio
Gibson’s proposal would see Recursion’s first drugs come to market in the traditional way, before starting the subscription model once it has a medicine portfolio. The monthly price could increase as more treatments are added.
Supporters of subscription pricing say it reduces uncertainty around revenue for drugmakers and the costs facing health-care providers.