Novartis’ Sandoz division was on Friday granted European Commission approval for its biosimilar version of Johnson & Johnson’s epoietin alfa (Eprex). It’s not a huge surprise, given the positive recommendation earlier this summer, and given that Sandoz has done this before: growth hormone Omnitrope became the first biosimilar drug to gain European approval last year (and, after a long legal kerfuffle, got onto the US market, too).
But this should nevertheless be a big deal. We’re talking, after all, about a cheaper copy of EPO, the blockbuster anemia drug that made Amgen. A drug with sales that top $7 billion globally. Of all the biologics in generic firms’ sights, this has to be by far the most valuable--the "killer biologic," as one of you readers put it in a comment on a previous post. EPO is one of the most expensive drugs on many hospital formularies, and accounts for a huge chunk of payor expenditure.
At last!, we should be saying, the long-threatened generic biologics revolution has come to pass. Injectables will get cheaper, patient access will improve, originators will be forced to innovate and move on.
The reality isn’t quite so revolutionary. Sandoz is one of the few companies with the resources to persevere with biosimilars; many smaller firms dropped out as it became clear how onerous clinical trial and regulatory requirements would be.
Commercialization ain’t a slam dunk, either. Sure, a 20% discount counts given the prices of these drugs. But it’s up to individual countries to decide on whether docs may substitute the originator drug with a biosimilar. Innovators have done a good job lobbying against interchangeability. Questions and concerns over safety standards mean that biosimilar firms have an uphill struggle on the marketing and educational front, ensuring that these products are perceived as equivalent, not potentially dangerous cheapies.
Still, Sandoz will be helped considerably by the fact that its biosimilar has been granted the same international non-proprietary name (INN) as the reference drug, epoietin alfa (to the delight of the European Generic Medicines Association, since this goes some way at least to proving their case for scientific equivalence). Sandoz’s EPO will be available under three different brand names, though, likely in order to leverage locally-recognized and trusted generic brands across the various European markets.
Stada, another surviving biosimilars stalwart, had to settle for a slightly different INN for its generic EPO--epoietin zeta, filed in June 2006. That probably helped drive their decision to hand over commercialization to US-based specialist hospital marketer Hospira last November. The move was about “curbing financial risks” associated with the project, whose approval, as the press release optimistically states, “is still possible in late 2007”. Also last year, Mayne Pharma pulled out of a marketing deal with Pliva (now part of Barr Pharmaceuticals) on generic EPO. The product was approved in Croatia in 2005 but hasn’t got past the EU regulators.
In sum, Sandoz's approval in itself isn’t much of a threat to J&J, even less to Amgen, which sells epoietin alfa as Epogen in the US. But it is symbolic, at least in its timing, of an end to the monopolies that innovators have enjoyed on hard-to-make biologics like EPO, a topic we discussed in more detail in this IN VIVO feature.
Sandoz’s head of Biopharmaceuticals Ajaz Hussain knows that biosimilars’ take off will be slow; he told IN VIVO Blog about it earlier this summer. But take off they will, eventually—and when they do, this approval may well be looked upon, if only retrospectively, as one of the most important steps along the way.
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