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FDA approves record eight biosimilars in H1 2024; okays first interchangeable biosimilars for Eylea
Biologics, or complex drugs that are derived from living organisms, have revolutionized treatment of various conditions such as cancer, autoimmune diseases, and chronic illnesses. In 2023, eight out of 10 of the world’s top-selling drugs were biologics, including Merck’s Keytruda, AbbVie’s Humira, and Sanofi’s Dupixent.Due to their high costs, accessibility of biologics has been a challenge. That’s why biosimilars, or game-changing copycats of biologics that provide highly similar yet more affordable alternatives to established biologics, are becoming popular.The first biosimilar — Sandoz’ Zarxio — was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2015. Its reference biologic was Amgen’s Neupogen (filgrastim).  Since then, the global market for biosimilars has been growing at an impressive pace — between 2015 and 2020, it grew at a whopping compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 78 percent, touching US$ 17.9 billion in size. It is expected to continue growing at a CAGR of 15 percent and reach a size of about US$ 75 billion by 2030.Major biosimilar players include Amgen, Sandoz, Samsung Bioepis, Pfizer, Biocon Biologics, Celltrion, Stada Arzneimittel, Accord Healthcare, Fresenius Kabi, Coherus Biosciences, Apotex, and Sanofi. The increasing demand for biosimilars has propelled growth in contract manufacturing. Some of the leading contract manufacturing organizations (CMOs) and contract development and manufacturing organizations (CDMOs) that manufacture biosimilars are Polpharma Biologics, Catalent, Pfizer CentreOne, Lonza, Boehringer Ingelheim BioXcellence, Thermo Fisher Scientific, WuXi Biologics, and FUJIFILM Diosynth Biotechnologies.Access the Interactive Dashboard for Biosimilar Developments (Free Excel)Amgen, Sandoz top list of ‘approved biosimilars’; FDA okays 8 copycats in H1 2024Over the recent years, regulatory agencies like the FDA and the European Medicines Agency (EMA) have established rigorous approval pathways for biosimilars.Since 2015,  FDA has approved 53 biosimilars, while the EMA has approved 86 biosimilars. Among the US, European and Canadian markets, Amgen and Sandoz are tied in the first place with 13 approved biosimilars each. Samsung Biologics has nine approved biosimilars, followed by Pfizer with eight and Biocon Biologics with seven. In the first half of this year, FDA set a record by approving eight biosimilars — the highest for H1 of any year. EMA has okayed six biosimilars so far in 2024.In 2023, five biosimilars were approved by the FDA with just one being okayed in the first half. The year marked the end of exclusivity for Humira after 20 years, in which it netted a total of US$ 200 billion in sales. AbbVie’s flagship autoimmune drug has a record 10 biosimilars.Johnson & Johnson’s Stelara also lost exclusivity in 2023 and as many as 11 drugmakers hope to bring its biosimilars to the market. Amgen’s Wezlana was the first biosimilar to Stelara, and it was approved as interchangeable by FDA in October last year.Access the Interactive Dashboard for Biosimilar Developments (Free Excel) FDA approves first interchangeable biosimilar for Eylea, cuts regulatory feeDeveloping a biosimilar costs both money and time. According to Pfizer, developing a biosimilar can take five to nine years and cost over US$ 100 million, not including regulatory fees.In October 2023, FDA slashed its fees with the program fee at US$ 177,397, down from US$ 304,162. The application fees for products that require clinical data has been set at US$ 1,018,753, down from US$ 1,746,745. The application fee for products that don’t require clinical data has been set lower — at US$ 509,377 —  down from US$ 873,373 set earlier. This reduction in application fee has propelled demand for contract manufacturing of biosimilars.There has also been a rise in approvals of interchangeable biosimilars this year. Interchangeable biosimilars meet additional requirements and may be substituted for its reference product by a pharmacist without consulting the prescriber. This year saw FDA approve the first interchangeable biosimilars for bone cancer drug denosumab (Prolia and Xgeva) in Jubbonti and Wyost as well as for eculizumab (Soliris) in Bkemv.In May, FDA approved the first interchangeable biosimilars for eye drug aflibercept (Eylea) in Opuviz and Yesafili. Other biosimilars approved in 2024 include Simlandi for adalimumab (Humira), Tyenne for tocilizumab (Actemra), Selarsdi for ustekinumab (Stelara), and Hercessi for trastuzumab (Herceptin).Access the Interactive Dashboard for Biosimilar Developments (Free Excel) Merck’s Keytruda, BMS’ Opdivo, Novartis’ Cosentyx brace for biosimilar competitionHealthcare spending in the US is projected to rise from US$ 4.5 trillion in 2022 to US$ 6 trillion by 2027. While biologics involve just two percent of prescriptions, they account for 46 percent of all pharmaceutical spending. In 2022, US$ 252 billion was spent on biologics.Biosimilar-related savings in 2023 were estimated to be US$ 9.4 billion in the US and € 10 billion (US$ 10.68 billion) in Europe. With expensive and widely used drugs like AbbVie’s Humira, J&J’s Stelara, and Regeneron’s Eylea coming under competition, US savings are projected to reach US$ 181 billion through 2027. Between 2026 and 2032, about 39 blockbusters are set to lose exclusivity in the US and Europe. Merck’s Keytruda (pembrolizumab) was the world’s top-selling drug last year, generating US$ 25 billion in sales. Its patent is set to expire in 2028 with sales expected to drop 19 percent to US$ 27.4 billion in 2029 from US$ 33.7 billion the previous year. Samsung Bioepis and Amgen initiated phase 3 trials of pembrolizumab in April and May of this year, respectively.Opdivo (nivolumab), belonging to the same class of drugs, competes with Keytruda and is also set to lose patent protection in 2028. It hauled in US$ 10 billion in total global sales in 2023 for Bristol Myers Squibb. The key patents of Novartis’ Cosentyx (secukinumab) are set to expire between 2025 and 2026. Cosentyx saw sales of US$ 5 billion in 2023. Taizhou Mabtech Pharmaceutical and Bio-Thera Solutions are conducting phase 3 trials of secukinumab.Access the Interactive Dashboard for Biosimilar Developments (Free Excel) Our viewWith over 2 billion people worldwide unable to access life-saving medicines, biosimilars hold the key to healthcare accessibility. In 2023, a record 13 biosimilars were launched in the market — the highest for a single year. And this included nine much-anticipated biosimilars to AbbVie’s Humira.  In April this year, FDA announced a Biosimilars Action Plan to streamline the development of biosimilars. With a sharp focus on biosimilars, we expect more records to be broken in the near term. New launches of biosimilars to drugs like J&J’s Stelara, Regeneron’s Eylea and Merck’s Keytruda will surely help in creating new records.

Impressions: 1108

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-blog/fda-approves-record-eight-biosimilars-in-h1-2024-okays-first-interchangeable-biosimilars-for-eylea

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
27 Jun 2024
DMF submissions from China jump 42% as India continues to top list in Q1 2024
Generic drugs play a crucial role in providing access to life-saving drugs at affordable prices. To that end, drugmakers submit Drug Master Files (DMFs) or their ‘recipes for making generics’ to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for review. Of these, Type II DMFs involve active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) for both branded and generic drugs.PharmaCompass has been reviewing Type II submissions for several years now. We have noticed that these filings have been increasing in recent years. There has been a 33.5 percent increase in Type II DMF submissions since Q1 2018 (when 176 Type II DMFs had been submitted). However, at 235, the first quarter (Q1) of 2024 saw only a 1.3 percent increase in DMF submissions over Q1 2023. In Q1 2023, DMF submissions had increased by 21.5 percent (over Q1 2022).Of the 235 Type II submissions received by the FDA in Q1 of this year, only 35 (or around 15 percent) had their review completed under the Generic Drug User Fee Act (GDUFA). The total number of reviews completed by the US federal agency so far this year is 129.In all, FDA received 353 Type II, III, IV, and V DMF submissions, compared to 291 in Q1 2023, an increase of 21.3 percent.View FDA DMF Filings in Q1 2024 (Power BI Dashboard, Free Excel Available)DMF submissions from India dip 1.8%; China witnesses 42% rise in filings As has been the trend, India (dubbed as the pharmacy of the world) and China filed the maximum DMF submissions, with 107 and 101 submissions respectively. However, DMFs filed by Indian companies saw a marginal dip of 1.8 percent in Q1 2024 — in Q1 2023, Indian companies had filed 109 Type II DMFs. Meanwhile, DMF filings by Chinese drugmakers increased 42.2 percent in Q1 2024, up from 71 in Q1 2023.India’s MSN Laboratories was the clear leader with 15 DMF submissions to the FDA, while China’s Sichuan Elixir Pharmaceutical came a distant second with nine submissions. Indian drugmakers Aurobindo Pharma and Global Calcium (with seven submissions each) were tied at third position. There were two players at the fifth spot — India’s Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories and China’s Zhejiang Jingsheng Pharmaceutical — as both these drugmakers registered six submissions each.View FDA DMF Filings in Q1 2024 (Power BI Dashboard, Free Excel Available) Diabetes, cancer drugs emerge as hot molecules in Q1 2024Approved in June 2020, triheptanoin is the first and only FDA-approved treatment for children and adults with long-chain fatty acid oxidation disorders (LC-FAOD). At five, triheptanoin saw the maximum DMF filings. Four of those applications have already been positively reviewed.Anti-diabetic drug sitagliptin phosphate monohydrate saw four DMF filings. Empagliflozin, the API found in Boehringer Ingelheim and Eli Lilly’s diabetes drug Jardiance, drew three DMF filings in Q1 2024.In the US, Jazz Pharmaceuticals’ Zepzelca (lurbinectedin) is indicated for the treatment of adult patients with metastatic small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Three DMF applications were submitted for lurbinectedin. Similarly, ruxolitinib phosphate, used for the treatment of patients with intermediate or high-risk myelofibrosis, also received three DMF applications.Semaglutide — the glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist that catapulted Novo Nordisk to the position of the most valuable public company in Europe — received three DMF filings. Semaglutide’s arch rival, tirzepatide, also drew three DMF filings.AstraZeneca’s Brilinta (ticagrelor) plus aspirin is currently approved in over 115 countries for the prevention of stroke, heart attack, and other events in adults with acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Ticagrelor received three DMF submissions. Vonoprazan fumarate, a first-in-class potassium-competitive acid blocker to treat acid-related diseases, also received three DMF submissions.View FDA DMF Filings in Q1 2024 (Power BI Dashboard, Free Excel Available) Eighteen DMFs filed for first time in Q1 2024 During the first quarter of this year, 14 drugs saw first time filing of DMFs. Together, these 14 drugs attracted 18 DMF filings with tirzepatide topping the list with three submissions from Chinese companies.The 14 drugs that saw first time filing were clascoterone, capmatinib hydrochloride, niraparib tosylate monohydrate, vibegron, cabozantinib sulfate, ruxolitinib hemifumarate, ripretinib, ruxolitinib, ruxolitinib mesylate, tucatinib hemiethanolate, tecovirimat, tirzepatide, tolvaptan povidone, and azilsartan.View FDA DMF Filings in Q1 2024 (Power BI Dashboard, Free Excel Available) Our viewUntil 2020, DMF submissions by Indian companies used to be double those of Chinese and American firms put together. In 2022, DMF filings from India began to dip, while submissions by Chinese companies began to rise. In the first half of 2023, there was a 46.5 percent rise in DMF submissions from China. The gap between DMF filings by India and China has narrowed down considerably this year. The reasons behind this phenomenon may be multiple. But it definitely implies that America will find it increasingly difficult to reduce its reliance on China.

Impressions: 2047

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-blog/dmf-submissions-from-china-jump-42-as-india-continues-to-top-list-in-q1-2024

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
23 May 2024
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