Sales of brand and generic pharmaceuticals in the United States reached $274.7 billion in 2006. Consumers in this country, including the federal government, are paying tremendous amounts of money for drugs and the cost continues to be a growing concern for all parties involved. Part of this increased cost encountered by consumers can be directly attributed to the ever-increasing costs manufacturers must cope with in the development of new drugs. Economists estimate that it takes twelve to fifteen years to develop a single new drug and have it approved by the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”). The average cost: $800 million. For every 10,000 compounds investigated, only five are ever tested as potential medicines in clinical trials and only one is ever approved for patient use. Of all the drugs approved by the FDA, only three out of ten generate revenues that meet or exceed average research and development costs.