Pre-Launch Internet Buzz For New Drugs Can Lead to Greater Online Awareness
Pre-Launch Internet Buzz For New Drugs Can Lead to Greater Online Awareness, Nielsen BuzzMetrics Finds
By tracking pre-and post-approval buzz of four new drugs, Nielsen BuzzMetrics' Healthcare Practice found that new drug therapies that generated even small amounts of pre-approval buzz enjoyed a comparatively large and sustained increase in discussion among relevant communities once the drugs were approved for use among the general population.
In the cases examined, this phenomenon held true for drugs whose therapeutic value is not considered a great improvement over existing drugs for the same illnesses.
"Brands that achieve preliminary buzz in relevant online communities tend to achieve greater momentum once the drug is approved," said Lydia Worthington, Vice President of Client Services and Healthcare Practice Leader for Nielsen BuzzMetrics, and chief author of the study. "While there are many factors that ultimately influence overall buzz and engagement, pharmaceutical marketers would be wise to consider investing in pre-launch initiatives that get patients talking and consequently primed for post-approval launch and marketing activities."
Nielsen BuzzMetrics, the global measurement standard for consumer-generated media, helps companies promote and protect their brands by analyzing word-of-mouth behavior in online consumer discussions, boards, forums, Usenet newsgroups, review sites, blogs and other data sources.
"However, early buzz is not a risk-free proposition,"
Methodology:
For this study, Nielsen BuzzMetrics collected, measured and analyzed thousands of word-of-mouth discussions in online patient communities about four drugs. Discussions were monitored for six months before FDA approval and four months afterward. The drugs were Abraxane and Tarceva, both cancer-fighting drugs; Tysabri, for treating multiple sclerosis (voluntarily suspended from the market in October 2005 to undergo further study), and Byetta, a drug that controls blood sugar levels.
Key Findings:
· Abraxane, a promising breast cancer drug with fewer side effects than existing treatments, captured less than 2% of online buzz for one month before approval and rose to only 4% of online discussion four months after approval.
· By comparison, Tarceva, a second- or third-tier lung cancer treatment for patients in whom chemotherapy has not worked, captured sustained 2% discussion levels for six months leading up to approval and jumped to 16% levels of online awareness in the four months after approval.
· Discussion about Byetta was less than 1% in the pre-approval phase and rose to only 4% of all online discussion three months after approval.
· Discussion about Tysabri, a promising MS drug, jumped from 4% six months before approval to nearly 15% immediately before approval, and was on its way to 20% discussion levels post-approval before it was pulled from the market.
About Nielsen BuzzMetrics
The Nielsen BuzzMetrics service, marketed by BuzzMetrics, Inc., is the global standard in measuring consumer-generated media and word of mouth. Nielsen BuzzMetrics helps more than 100 leading global companies strategically leverage the buzz surrounding them—clients like Canon, Comcast, Ford, General Motors, HBO, Kraft, Microsoft, Nokia, P&G, Sony, Target and
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