May 29th 2025
The FDA designates 2 biosimilars as interchangeable, enhancing access to treatments for inflammatory diseases and multiple sclerosis, while 2 other companies expand their biosimilar partnership to include more products.
Association of European Cancer Leagues Calls for Faster Biosimilar Uptake
October 10th 2018The Association of European Cancer Leagues, a nonprofit, pan-European organization of national and regional cancer societies, has issued a new white paper that calls for greater biosimilar use as a means to reduce costs and increase patient access to cancer treatment.
Stakeholders Fear USMCA Will Thwart Biosimilars
October 9th 2018Earlier this month, the United States, Mexico, and Canada entered into the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement, or USMCA, an updated version of the North American Free Trade Agreement. Since the details of the agreement were released, the pharmaceutical intellectual property portions of the deal have come under scrutiny.
European Officials Promote Use of EHRs to Gather Real-World Data on Pharmaceuticals
October 7th 2018Using electronic health records (EHRs) to create a learning healthcare system, say the authors, can enable researchers to generate new knowledge that will accrue benefits to future generations of patients.
House Joins Senate in Passing Patient Right to Know Drug Prices Act
October 6th 2018The United States House of Representatives has passed the Patient Right to Know Drug Prices Act. The bill will now be sent to the President for his consideration, as the Senate already passed the bill earlier last month with an overwhelming majority of 92 to 2.
Merck Seeing Gains for Renflexis at VA
October 5th 2018Merck’s infliximab biosimilar, sold as Renflexis and approved by the FDA in April of last year, was determined to be the lowest priced infliximab option available to the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), and was awarded a national contract. Subsequently, it has become the sole infliximab product available on the VA's National Formulary.
UK Proposes Shorter Time Frame for Biosimilar Authorization Amid Brexit Shortage Fears
October 5th 2018The United Kingdom has opened a consultation on provisions that it hopes will ensure the supply of medicines in the event that no agreement can be made between the United Kingdom and the European Union before the Brexit deadline.
In Europe, as in the US, Biosimilar Launch Prices Tell Only Part of the Story
September 28th 2018In the United States, biosimilar launches have been met with disappointment over what many view as too-shallow discounts to reference products’ list prices. However, as Aurelio Arias, a consultant at IQVIA, explained during the SMi 9th annual conference on Biosimilars and Biobetters, held September 26-27 in London, United Kingdom, the substantial savings that the European market has realized with biosimilars are not necessarily reflected in list prices, either.
With Payers Under Pressure, Biosimilars Must Demonstrate Their Value
September 27th 2018In recent years, payers in Europe have been increasing their scrutiny of new therapies as increasingly high-cost drugs come to the market. And while the United States does not have the same cost constraints as the single-payer health systems, it too faces heightened pressures to lower costs in order to afford innovative therapies.
Switching to Biosimilars in the NHS Provides Savings, Presents Unique Challenges
September 26th 2018Fraser Cummings, MBChB, DPhil, led one of the first clinical teams to switch patients receiving the reference infliximab (Remicade) to CT-P13 (Remsima) in UK clinical practice. During the SMi 9th annual conference on Biosimilars and Biobetters, held September 26-27 in London, United Kingdom, Cummings explained his experience with this switch in his gastroenterology clinic, and looked ahead to the arrival of adalimumab biosimilars in the National Health Service (NHS).
CBO Says CREATES Act Would Reduce Federal Spending on Prescription Drugs
September 24th 2018In its report, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) notes that it “expects that the bill’s provisions would allow generic drugs (including biosimilar versions of biologics) to enter the market earlier, on average, than they would under current law.” Additionally, CBO said that enacting the legislation would reduce federal spending on prescription drugs.
In Brazil, Government and Industry Partner to Develop Biosimilars
September 21st 2018Brazil benefits from a program, known as the Partnership for Productive Development, that brings together government and the private sector to develop strategic products of interest to the Brazilian health system—including biosimilars of high-cost biologics that account for approximately half of annual drug spending.
Senate Passes Bill Addressing Gag Clauses and Biosimilar Settlements
September 18th 2018The bill, introduced in March 2018 by Senator Susan Collins, R-Maine—together with Senators Claire McCaskill, D-Missouri, and Debbie Stabenow, D-Michigan—eliminates so-called “gag clauses” that prevent pharmacies from telling consumers whether they could spend less on their medication by paying out-of-pocket.
Experts See Progress, Not Perfection, in the Biosimilar Reimbursement Landscape
September 9th 2018At a panel at the GRx+Biosims 2018, Molly Burich, MS, director of public policy for biosimilars and reimbursement at Boehringer Ingelheim, and Melissa Andel, MPP, vice president of health policy at Applied Policy, discussed the impact that US policy developments are having and will continue to have on the biosimilars market.
A Holistic Approach is Crucial for Biosimilar Uptake
September 8th 2018Alex Brill, CEO of Matrix Global Advisors, gave a presentation during the GRx+Biosims 2018 conference in Baltimore, Maryland that discussed the barriers to increased uptake of biosimilars in the United States, and how to address those issues.
IQVIA Report Assesses Long-Term Sustainability of the Biosimilars Marketplace
September 6th 2018The European Union already has far more approved biosimilars—45 products referencing 15 medicines—than does the United States, but as a newly released report from IQVIA states, the number of European biosimilars available today represents just a fraction of what the market is expected to contain in the coming years, raising questions about the sustainability of the market.
In the Debate Over Interchangeability, What Can the United States Learn From Europe?
September 6th 2018Writing in the European Medical Journal, Anna La Noce, MD, PhD, and Marcin Ernst, MD, MBA, explain that much confusion about switching between biosimilars and reference products in the United States versus in the European Union arises from different uses of the term “interchangeability.”
More Biosimilar Approvals Are Not Equal to Increased Competition, Stakeholders Say
September 5th 2018While the “FDA deservers tremendous credit to enhance and expedite [biosimilars]… there is also a reluctance or hesitation to provide a full account that while the rate of approvals has picked up, the amount of biosimilars on the market [remains low]. Approval is not a synonym for competition," said Chester Davis of the Association for Accessible Medicines.
Celltrion Asks NHS to Start Biologics Earlier in Patients With RA
September 5th 2018Currently, UK eligibility criteria for starting biologics in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) set a threshold of a disease activity score in a count of 28 joints of 5.1 or higher—the threshold for severe disease—on at least 2 occasions measured 1 month apart.
FDA's Public Hearing on Biosimilar Action Plan Draws Wide Stakeholder Involvement
September 5th 2018Though biosimilars have the potential to provide a less costly option for patients, the products have not seen the uptake in the marketplace that the FDA had expected. This apprehension was reiterated in FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb’s comments at the meeting: “I’m not satisfied with the current state of the biologics market and biosimilars in particular.”
New Zealand's Pharmac Proposes Funding Only Biosimilar Epoetin Alfa
September 4th 2018Janssen’s drug, sold in New Zealand as Eprex (and in the United States as Epogen) would lose funding after a transition period beginning in February 2019. After the close of the transition, only Novartis’ approved biosimilar, sold as Binocrit, would be eligible for funding in community and hospital settings.