Biosimilars

US: Biotech drugs need only seven years protection

Biosimilars/News | Posted 04/09/2009

Biological drugs should be subject to generic competition in the US after seven years, the Obama administration said, calling it a ‘generous compromise’. Brand-name companies have lobbied for 12 to 14 years of exclusivity, while Mr Waxman proposed only five. As reported by Bloomberg News, access to cheaper copies of medicines made by biotechnology companies is ‘a key element’ in reducing healthcare costs, White House officials said in a letter to Representative Henry Waxman. “Lengthy periods of exclusivity will harm patients by diminishing innovation and unnecessarily delaying access to affordable drugs,” it said.

Sandoz receives approval for first-ever Japanese biosimilar

Biosimilars/News | Posted 04/09/2009

Sandoz has received marketing authorisation for the first ever Japanese biosimilar, recombinant human growth hormone somatropin. The precedent-setting decision further reinforces Sandoz's global leadership position in the rapidly-emerging market for biosimilars, or follow-on versions of existing state-of-the-art biopharmaceuticals.

KBI BioPharma starts US PER.C6 cell line generation service

Biosimilars/News | Posted 04/09/2009

US contract services firm KBI Biopharma announced on 25 June 2009 that it has started using the PER.C6 platform for cell line generation as part of its offering to meet growing demand for biomanufacturing services, whether they are to produce biologicals, biosimilars or vaccines.

BIO wants to delay biodissimilars as long as possible

Biosimilars/News | Posted 31/08/2009

Biotech drugs are big revenue earners. Their sales growth rate may have slipped back into single figures last year, but according to IMS Health data they still accounted for more than 37% of the growth in the US pharmaceutical market last year, with revenues of around US$85 billion (Euros 60.8 billion), and biotech stands to take an even larger share of the market in future.

Obama wants to introduce US biosimilars pathway

Biosimilars/News | Posted 31/08/2009

US President Barack Obama plans to fund part of his healthcare reform plans by backing an approval pathway for generic biologicals. As reported by Christopher Spillane in Scrip News, Mr Obama lobbied the American Medical Association to support proposals to overhaul US healthcare in a far-reaching address.

US Federal Trade Commission issues report on biosimilars

Biosimilars/News | Posted 05/08/2009

The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) released a report entitled Follow-on Biologic Drug Competition, which examines whether the price of biological drugs could be reduced by competition from so-called ‘follow-on biologics’ (FOBs) or biosimilars.

New expression systems create competitive advantage

Biosimilars/News | Posted 05/08/2009

New, alternative expression systems in various stages of development are showing their viability in large-scale protein manufacture. The economics and increased simplicity of these new platforms make them better alternatives to the currently dominant E. coli, yeast and CHO systems.

High yields and human-like glycosylation with DSM’s technology

Biosimilars/News | Posted 05/08/2009

DSM says that studies done at its R & D laboratories in Groningen, The Netherlands, show that its extreme density (XD) technology boosts bioreactor productivity and titers of mammalian cell culture processes for protein and antibody production. The studies show that the yields from Chinese hamster ovary cell cultures can be increased 5-10 fold over their previous fed-batch processes using only off the shelf, commercially available media.

Biosimilars and biopharmaceuticals: the ERA-EDTA position

Biosimilars/Research | Posted 05/08/2009

In a position paper by the European Renal Association - European Dialysis and Transplant Association (ERA-EDTA) Council in Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation written by Adrian Covic of the Parhon University Hospital in Iasi, Romania – who received financial gratitude for congress participation, lectures and clinical trials from: Amgen, Affimax, F. Hoffmann-La Roche and Janssen-Cilag – and co-authors, it is stated that biosimilars may offer considerable advantages to hard-pressed healthcare economies, as the costs of providing effective therapies in a variety of new and existing disease areas increase progressively. However, a decision to permit their use clinically should be balanced by a clear mandate to ensure as with all biopharmaceutical agents, that patients, physicians and pharmacists truly understand the complex arguments and decisions which apply to this new and challenging area. In particular, pharmacovigilance is a responsibility that is shared between the pharmaceutical industry, pharmacists and physicians, with appropriately informed and educated patients. Ease of tracing and identification of new/substituted agents especially when dealing with patients who may be exposed to injected therapies for many years is a pivotal requirement and one where new input into nomenclature decisions and systems is now urgently needed. Any decision to employ biosimilar biopharmaceuticals should be taken with appropriate knowledge and understanding of this complex area by the primary responsible physician, after a careful appraisal of the advantages and disadvantages of taking this course of action, and with appropriate systems for pharmacovigilance in place.

The challenge of biosimilars

Biosimilars/Research | Posted 05/08/2009

In a study by Professor Håkan Mellstedt of the Karolinska University Hospital Solna, Stockholm, Sweden, Professor Dietger Niederwieser of the University of Leipzig, Germany, and Heinz Ludwig of the Wilhelminenspital, Vienna, Austria – who all served as ad hoc scientific advisors to Amgen – issues associated with the introduction of alternative versions of biosimilars used in the oncology setting were reviewed.