Biosimilars/Research

Health economic challenges for biosimilars

Biosimilars/Research | Posted 26/11/2010

Biopharmaceuticals represent a fast-growing segment of the pharmaceutical market, making up one third of products in the development pipeline and accounting for 9% of pharmaceutical expenditure [1]. Whereas the first generation of biopharmaceuticals tended to consist of first-in-class products addressing unmet clinical needs in small populations, e.g. bevacizumab for metastatic colorectal cancer, the current wave of products targets larger populations, e.g. insulins for type 2 diabetes mellitus [2].

Market access for biopharmaceuticals and biosimilars: a case study

Biosimilars/Research | Posted 26/11/2010

Filgrastim is one of the first biopharmaceuticals for which biosimilars have entered the market. This case study illustrates the health economic challenges and the issues that arose in the R & D, registration, pricing and reimbursement of the biopharmaceutical and its biosimilars [1].

Biosimilar EPOs show the same or better quality

Biosimilars/Research | Posted 12/11/2010

Researchers have found biosimilar erythropoietin (EPO) products have the same or even better quality compared with the original branded products.

Epoetin alfa and pure red cell aplasia

Biosimilars/Research | Posted 01/10/2010

Most therapeutic proteins have the potential to induce an immune response. Cases of pure red cell aplasia (PRCA) were reported after the formulation of Eprex (epoetin alfa) was changed. It is now known that ‘the process is the product’ and the formulation cannot be changed without approval by the relevant authorities.

Approval of biosimilar epoetins: how similar are they?

Biosimilars/Research | Posted 24/09/2010

A consensus has emerged that approval of biosimilars requires both biological and clinical evidence. The ‘comparability exercise’ requires consideration of a wide range of aspects, including analytical and physico-chemical characterisation by several methods, comparative biological assays, comparative immunogenicity assessment, among others. The use of different host cells for the biosimilar product and the comparator in principle is possible.

Phase I trial of a biosimilar erythropoietin

Biosimilars/Research | Posted 25/08/2010

A Phase I clinical trial of Hospira’s biosimilar erythropoietin (EPO) in patients with anaemia associated with chronic renal failure and chemotherapy has started in the US.

What clinical trials will be required for biosimilar mAbs?

Biosimilars/Research | Posted 25/08/2010

The relevant European guideline states that if the reference medicinal product has more than one indication, the efficacy and safety of a biosimilar has to be justified, if necessary by demonstrating it separately for each indication claimed. The guideline brings up the possibility of ‘extrapolating’ efficacy (granting several clinical indications that are licensed for the reference product, although only one of the indications has been studied in the clinical development programme of the biosimilar). This would not be done without serious consideration. The mechanism of action of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) is usually complex and in many cases only partially understood.

Technical challenges in defining mAbs

Biosimilars/Research | Posted 25/08/2010

Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are highly complex molecules with secondary and tertiary structures. The drug substance (the molecule itself) and drug product (the pharmaceutically formulated final product) are heterogeneous, i.e. a mixture of several slightly different structures. Although the molecular characterisation of a mAb molecule itself might have reached a high level of precision, reliability, quality and reproducibility, various possibilities for mAb heterogeneity exist. Variations to the mAb protein include alternative disulfide pairings/disulfide shuffling, deamidation, (methionine) oxidation, cyclisation of N-terminal glutamine residues and partial enzymatic cleavage during manufacturing. Variations of post-translational modifications such as glycosylation patterns include differential addition of sugars, alternative branching of sugar chains and others. Physicochemical characterisation of these characteristics currently remains cumbersome.

How far does similarity go?

Biosimilars/Research | Posted 25/08/2010

How much similarity does a biosimilar monoclonal antibody (mAb) have to show to its reference mAb? The European overarching biosimilar guideline states that a biosimilar needs to be ‘similar, in molecular and biological terms, to the active substance of the reference medicinal product.’ The guideline gives an example to highlight this, stating that an interferon alfa-2b would not be acceptable as a reference product to a biosimilar interferon alfa-2a1. Because interferon alfa-2a and alfa-2b differ in only one amino acid, the guideline thus indicates that the entire amino acid sequence of the two molecules should be identical.

The biosimilars challenge

Biosimilars/Research | Posted 30/07/2010

What are the challenges facing biosimilars? This was the question broached in a paper by Professor Håkan Mellstedt of the Department of Oncology, at the Karolinska University Hospital Solna, Stockholm, Sweden.