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India's Regulatory Reforms Boost Pharma Innovation and Patient Access
15 Nov
Summary
- India aligns "ease of doing business" with patient welfare
- Regulatory reforms streamline drug approvals and licensing
- Innovative therapies for rare diseases, cancer to reach patients faster

In 2025, India's pharmaceutical industry is undergoing a significant regulatory evolution aimed at enhancing both ease of doing business and patient welfare. The government has introduced reforms that bridge efficiency and accountability across the entire drug development cycle.
India is working towards becoming a PICS member, which will align its manufacturing quality with international standards and reduce duplication of audits, accelerating export approvals. Meanwhile, the CDSCO has been digitizing approval and licensing processes through the SUGAM portal, enabling real-time tracking of applications and reducing bureaucratic delays.
These reforms are expected to have a profound impact on India's healthcare landscape over the next three to five years. Accelerated or conditional approval mechanisms are becoming increasingly common for diseases with high unmet needs, such as rare diseases, cancers, and neurological disorders. This will allow Indian patients to access critical treatments earlier, especially where time-to-treatment can be a matter of survival or quality of life.
India's transformation could see the country emerge as a global destination for pharmaceutical innovation, clinical research, and advanced drug development, underpinned by globally accepted data integrity, high manufacturing standards, and regulatory maturity.



