
Latin America Pharma Growth is surging as a high-growth engine for Boehringer Ingelheim, with double-digit market expansions outpacing mature regions like Europe, according to Dirk van Niekerk, the company’s President and CEO for South America. Strategic investments target cardio-renal-metabolic (CRM) pillars, oncology, and specialty care, fueled by improving political stability and patent protections. Initiatives bridge access gaps via enhanced market access teams, data analytics, and networks like stroke treatment expansion.
CRM Pipeline Fuels Latin America Pharma Growth
Boehringer Ingelheim’s seven-year pipeline prioritizes CRM, with heavy investments in obesity, liver disease (including MASH via survodutide), and kidney disease—positioning it as the top innovation source. Projections show high single-digit to double-digit regional growth, with the company entering obesity as the third player after GLP-1s, using a unique mechanism amid initial out-of-pocket dominance. Specialty care ranks next, with launches in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and interstitial lung disease driving growth over five to nine years, plus oncology re-entry via a new US-approved lung cancer therapy heading to South America. These counter patent cliffs on legacy products through portfolio tweaks and cost controls, like boosting stroke thrombolytic treatment from 7% to 20% of cases by 2030 via partnerships—aligning therapies with chronic disease burdens.
Data Land Powers Market Access Evolution
Since 2017, Boehringer Ingelheim shifted methodologies by building “Data Land” for large-scale datasets, starting in R&D and expanding to real-world evidence payers trust—one of the first 10 industry bespoke data centers. It tackles fragmented Latin American data, though analytics remains the bottleneck for reimbursement insights. Strategies mix key account management with institution-level talks in non-central high-cost areas, leveraging chronic kidney disease, diabetes, and heart failure experience for oncology and lung franchises. HTA-focused studies prove mortality gains and cost savings, aiding government dialogues—especially with Argentina’s stabilization and Colombia’s HTA advances—evolving pharma into healthcare partnerships with early diagnosis and digital tools.
Key shifts include patient groups amplifying specialty and rare disease access; obesity sparking pharmacoeconomic debates on prevention versus costs; oncology innovations demanding smaller-market negotiations; and AI speeding R&D via data prediction, with commercial HEOR impacts emerging from global oncology spends, obesity data needs, and China AI trends.
High-Growth Therapies Face Reimbursement Hurdles
Adaptable access closes approval-to-patient gaps for out-of-pocket obesity and specialties. HTA scrutiny in Argentina and Colombia will likely continue to emphasize long-term savings. The “Data Land” may lead to advances in regionally optimized evidence, building payer trust among these, and other HTA agencies.