
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


China has moved from a fast-following biotech market to a source of globally competitive innovation, according to Josh Smiley, president and chief operating officer of Zai Lab. Speaking on The Top Line podcast, Smiley traces the country’s evolution over the past two decades, pointing to regulatory harmonization, expanded national insurance coverage and deepening R&D capabilities as key drivers. He said the most recent wave of Chinese biotechs is no longer focused solely on domestic opportunities but on first- or best-in-class medicines that can compete worldwide, particularly in oncology and immunology.
Smiley also details how Zai Lab blends China’s patient access and development speed with global clinical and regulatory standards, a model he says has helped accelerate programs such as Zai’s DLL3-targeted antibody-drug conjugate for small cell lung cancer into late-stage trials. As China-sourced deals now account for a growing share of global biotech partnerships, Smiley argues companies that integrate China early — without treating it as a standalone market — will have a strategic edge. The conversation offers a candid look at what’s next for Zai Lab and why China’s expanding role in drug innovation is likely to reshape the global pipeline for years to come.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By Fierce Life Sciences4.1
1212 ratings
China has moved from a fast-following biotech market to a source of globally competitive innovation, according to Josh Smiley, president and chief operating officer of Zai Lab. Speaking on The Top Line podcast, Smiley traces the country’s evolution over the past two decades, pointing to regulatory harmonization, expanded national insurance coverage and deepening R&D capabilities as key drivers. He said the most recent wave of Chinese biotechs is no longer focused solely on domestic opportunities but on first- or best-in-class medicines that can compete worldwide, particularly in oncology and immunology.
Smiley also details how Zai Lab blends China’s patient access and development speed with global clinical and regulatory standards, a model he says has helped accelerate programs such as Zai’s DLL3-targeted antibody-drug conjugate for small cell lung cancer into late-stage trials. As China-sourced deals now account for a growing share of global biotech partnerships, Smiley argues companies that integrate China early — without treating it as a standalone market — will have a strategic edge. The conversation offers a candid look at what’s next for Zai Lab and why China’s expanding role in drug innovation is likely to reshape the global pipeline for years to come.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

3,235 Listeners

1,726 Listeners

4,413 Listeners

2,176 Listeners

385 Listeners

1,982 Listeners

353 Listeners

1,653 Listeners

153 Listeners

98 Listeners

3,982 Listeners

1,448 Listeners

336 Listeners

35 Listeners

169 Listeners