In April 2016, the Food and Drug Adminstration FDA approved Inflectra, a biosimilar to infliximab (Remicade), which was the first monoclonal antibody biosimilar---and here MedPage Today reviews subsequent developments regarding biosimilars for rheumatic diseases.
Since April, two other biosimilars have received approval: Erelzi, a biosimilar to etanercept (Enbrel), and Amjevita, a biosimilar to adalimumab (Humira).
The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) has stated, "The FDA considers a product to be 'biosimilar' to a reference product if it is shown to have no clinically meaningful differences with respect to safety, potency, and purity."
At the time of Inflectra's approval, Douglas White, MD, PhD, of the ACR's Committee on Rheumatologic Care told MedPage Today, "The ACR is hopeful that biosimilars will help reduce the cost of biologics and thus improve patient access to these complex and lifesaving drugs."
Eight months later, he said, "We remain cautiously optimistic about biosimilars including Inflectra. The most important development since April, in my opinion, is the release of the results of NOR-SWITCH. This trial provided real-world data on maintenance of efficacy as well as adverse events after nonmedical (that is, no medical indication to change drugs) switching from reference to biosimilar infliximab in 481 patients with a diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, spondyloarthritis, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, or psoriasis."
The study, presented in a late-breaker session at the ACR meeting, followed patients for 52 weeks after either being switched from reference infliximab to the biosimilar CT-P13 or continuing on infliximab, and found disease worsening in 26.2% and 29.6%, which was within the non-inferiority margin.
"Unfortunately, I've not seen any reason to believe that the availability of biosimilars in the U.S. will reduce the out-of-pocket expenses to patients who rely on biologic therapies," White said. "Nor have I seen any evidence that the availability of biosimilars will reduce costs to these patients by reducing their insurance premiums. Indeed, early pricing information that I've seen indicates that discounts will be modest at best. Hopefully that will change as more biosimilars enter the market and competition increases."
"In addition to ongoing court battles between manufacturers, unresolved issues surrounding biosimilars include the FDA's final decisions regarding interchangeability and the state laws and regulations that will govern switching and notification. We continue to keep a close eye on those developments," White concluded.
A recent statement from the ACR noted, "Across the country, legislation governing the use and especially substitution of biosimilars has been moving through state legislatures. These bills and laws vary to some extent but are fairly uniform in that they will allow for the substitution by a pharmacist with a lower cost biosimilar that the FDA has designated as interchangeable. Without interchangeable status, a new prescription must be obtained in order to switch."
The three rheumatology biosimilars presently approved do not have interchangeable status.
In an update on the legal issues, Andrew Williams, PhD, of McDonnell Boehnen Hulbert & Berghoff, told MedPage Today that Pfizer announced on October 17 that it would begin shipping the Inflectra biosimilar in late November. "This press release indicated that it would be introduced at a 15% discount to the current wholesaler acquisition cost of Remicade," said Williams, who specializes in patent litigation in pharmaceuticals and biotechnology.
At the time of approval, Janssen, the owner of Remicade, had asserted that Inflectra infringes on a patent that doesn't expire until September 2018 and vowed to defend their intellectual property rights. However, in September 2016, the District Court found that U.S. patent no. 6,284,471 ("Anti-TNF Antibodies and Assays Employing Anti-TNFa Antibodies") was invalid, based on "obviousness-type double patenting," Williams explained. Janssen had also held patent 6,790,444, ("Anti-TNF Antibodies and Peptides of Human Necrosis Factor"), which expired in July 2011.
"In briefing for extending a deadline in the Federal Circuit, Janssen stated that U.S. sales began on November 28, 2016. Celltrion, et al. also indicated on December 6, 2016 in a different brief that they had recently launched," Williams said.
Source: MedPage Today
Skyrizi Overtakes Humira: “Product Hopping” Leaves Biosimilar Market in Limbo
November 7th 2024For the first time, Skyrizi (risankizumab-rzaa) has replaced Humira (reference adalimumab) as AbbVie’s sales driver, largely due to companies encouraging “product hopping” to avoid competition, creating concerns for the sustainability of the burgeoning adalimumab biosimilar market.
Breaking Barriers in Osteoporosis Care: New Denosumab Biosimilars Wyost, Jubbonti Approved
June 16th 2024In this episode, The Center for Biosimilars® delves into the FDA approval of the first denosumab biosimilars, Wyost and Jubbonti (denosumab-bbdz), and discuss their potential to revolutionize osteoporosis treatment with expert insights from 2 rheumatologists.
Eye on Pharma: Henlius, Organon Updates; Meitheal Portfolio Expansion; Celltrion Zymfentra Data
November 5th 2024Henlius and Organon’s pertuzumab biosimilar met phase 3 goals; Meitheal expanded its US biosimilars; Celltrion’s subcutaneous infliximab (Zymfentra) showed monotherapy could be as effective as combination therapy for inflammatory bowel disease.
Insights from Festival of Biologics: Dracey Poore Discusses Cardinal Health’s 2024 Biosimilar Report
May 19th 2024The discussion highlights key emerging trends from the Festival of Biologics conference and the annual Cardinal Health Biosimilars Report, including the importance of sustainability in the health care landscape and the challenges and successes in biosimilar adoption and affordability.
Phase 3 Study Reports Similar Efficacy Between SB17, Stelara in Psoriasis
October 19th 2024A phase 3, 28-week comparative clinical trial in patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis confirmed similarity of the proposed ustekinumab biosimilar SB17 (Samsung Bioepis) to the reference product (Stelara) in efficacy, safety, pharmacokinetics, and immunogenicity.
Eye on Pharma: Aflibercept Legal Drama; PBM, Humira Biosimilars; Denosumab Regulatory Review
October 15th 2024Regeneron appeals legal decision after judge refuses to block an aflibercept biosimilar; Prime Therapeutics, a pharmacy benefit manager (PBM), becomes the latest to offer biosimilars referencing Humira (adalimumab) at a low cost; the FDA and European Medicines Agency accept a denosumab biosimilar candidate for review.