Singapore-based Prestige BioPharma announced this week that its HD204, a proposed biosimilar bevacizumab product referencing Avastin, met its primary end point in a phase 1 study evaluating the pharmacokinetics (PK), safety, and immunogenicity of the biosimilar in comparison to its reference.
Singapore-based Prestige BioPharma announced this week that HD204, a proposed biosimilar bevacizumab product referencing Avastin, met its primary end point in a phase 1 study evaluating the pharmacokinetics (PK), safety, and immunogenicity of the biosimilar in comparison to its reference.
The study, SAMSON-1, sought to establish pairwise PK similarity among the proposed biosimilar, US-licensed Avastin, and EU-licensed Avastin. In total, 119 healthy male volunteers were randomized to receive a single dose of the study drug and were monitored for 71 days.
The primary end point was the area under the concentration curve from time zero to infinity (AUC0—inf). The prespecified bioequivalence margin for the 90% CI of the ratio of the geometric means for the primary PK parameter in each comparison was 80% to 125%.
According to Prestige, the 90% CIs for the ratio of the geometric means for each comparison fell within the prespecified margin, demonstrating PK equivalency of the biosimilar and the 2 reference products. Additionally, the 3 drugs demonstrated equivalency of secondary PK parameters: maximum observed concentration and AUC from time zero to the last observed quantifiable concentration.
No notable differences were observed among the 3 arms with respect to vital signs, electrocardiogram results, or laboratory tests, and no new safety signals were observed. No patients developed antidrug antibodies in the biosimilar arm.
Prestige’s chief executive officer, Lisa Park, PhD, said in a statement announcing the results that the topline data reflect Prestige’s “commitment to providing millions of patients with greater access to high-quality, safe, affordable treatment. We also look forward to further progress in the phase 3 global clinical study of HD204.”
The SAMSON-2 study, which is ongoing, will compare the biosimilar to the EU-licensed reference bevacizumab, and will assess the biosimilar’s efficacy, safety, PK, and immunogenicity in patients with metastatic or recurrent non-squamous non-small cell lung cancer.
Prestige says that it plans to file regulatory applications for the biosimilar bevacizumab in the European Union and in the United States in 2020, and that it will present data from the SAMSON program during the upcoming European Society for Medical Oncology 2019 meeting in Barcelona, Spain.
Escaping the Void: All Things Biosimilars With Craig & G
May 4th 2025To close out the Festival of Biologics, Craig Burton and Giuseppe Randazzo from the Association for Accessible Medicines and the Biosimilars Council tackle the current biosimilar landscape and how the industry can emerge from the "biosimilar void."
How AI Can Help Address Cost-Related Nonadherence to Biologic, Biosimilar Treatment
March 9th 2025Despite saving billions, biosimilars still account for only a small share of the biologics market—what's standing in the way of broader adoption and how can artificial intelligence (AI) help change that?
Eye on Pharma: Interchangeability Labels and Expanded Biosimilar Partnerships
May 29th 2025The 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.
The Trump Administration’s Drug Price Actions and Why US Prices Are Already Sky-High
May 17th 2025While the Trump administration’s latest executive order touts sweeping drug price cuts through international benchmarking, the broader pharmaceutical pricing crisis in the US reveals a far more complex web of development costs, profit incentives, and absent price controls—raising the question of whether any single policy, including potential drug tariffs, can truly untangle it.