First US biosimilar edges toward market

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Amgen’s Neupogen, the first biosimilar for which has been given the FDA’s blessing. @Bayne Stanley/Alamy

Sandoz’s biosimilar drug is about to become the first drug approved under the FDA’s biosimilar pathway. On January 7, the US Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA’s) oncologic drugs advisory committee voted unanimously to recommend approval of Basel-based Sandoz’s granulocyte colony stimulating factor filgrastim, a biosimilar of Thousand Oaks, California–based Amgen’s $1.2-billion seller Neupogen. Six years after Sandoz’s biosimilar filgrastim was approved in Europe, with 7.5 million patient-exposure days to support approval, it would seem a reasonable bet that the drug, whose proposed brand name is Zarxio, will get a green light on March 8, as Nature Biotechnology goes to press.

If so, it would mark a very long-awaited victory for biosimilars developers. The FDA’s biosimilar pathway was created in 2012 under the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act (BPCIA) after years of wrangling with originator firms. Zarxio’s launch would be symbolic of FDA’s broader blessing—at least in principle—for a whole new generation of cost-effective products. Zarxio, if approved to treat chemotherapy-induced neutropenia and related conditions, could save $5.7 billion in drug costs over the next decade, estimates US pharmacy benefit manager Express Scripts. No wonder New York–based Pfizer on February 5 deepened its commitment to biosimilars (and other hard-to-make generics) by a $17-billion bid for Lake Forest, Illinois–based Hospira, which is involved with two of the four known biosimilar submissions to FDA.

But if approval appears likely for Zarxio, several other barriers to commercial success remain (Nat. Biotechnol. 31, 264, 2013). Indeed, given the already relatively onerous nature of the US biosimilar pathway—known as 351(k)—“if this product doesn’t successfully launch, the biosimilar pathway is killed,” according to one Washington, DC–based expert who wants to remain anonymous.

What can go wrong? If Amgen gets its way, the courts could block, or at least delay, Sandoz (a division of Novartis) from launching. Amgen has thrown various accusations at the Swiss firm, ranging from not following the BPCIA rules over sharing information about its submission, to outright patent infringement.

Litigation aside, there remain unanswered questions around the product’s generic name and its label, just weeks away from the March 8 PDUFA (Prescription Drug User Fee Act) date. It’s unclear whether Zarxio will enjoy the same international nonproprietary (INN) name as the originator drug. FDA has yet to issue its promised guidance on biosimilar naming and faces strong pressure from innovator companies to mandate distinct INNs for each biosimilar product, purportedly to facilitate adverse event tracking. But ODAC member James Liebmann declared that the group had reviewed the drug as “filgrastim,” and that calling it anything else would be misleading. Sandoz agrees, pointing to the many US-marketed biologics that currently share an INN without any safety or traceability issues. “We’re sticking to our position that a brand name is the most useful” and that creating a new naming system is completely unwarranted, says a Sandoz spokesman.

FDA is unlikely to insist upon a completely different INN for Zarxio, but could suggest a hyphenated name, speculates Ronny Gal, a senior analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein in New York. A prefix wouldn’t be a disaster—Petah Tikva, Israel–based Teva’s long-acting Granix (filgrastim), approved as a novel biologic and launched in late 2013 as TBO-filgrastim, has about 15% market share by volume. But it would put another brake on the likely uphill battle convincing clinicians that the drug is clinically the same as Neupogen. It could also create headaches for pharmacy IT systems, including, for example, on alphabetical medication lists where the product would not appear with other filgrastims.

Sandoz doesn’t yet know how similar Zarxio’s label will be to the originator drug’s either. Biosimilar firms can apply for their products to be labeled ‘interchangeable’ with the originator drug—a designation that ostensibly supports automatic substitution by pharmacists, though several states have passed laws banning such action anyway (Nat. Biotechnol. 31, 269–270, 2013). For now, on FDA’s advice, Sandoz hasn’t applied for interchangeability; filgrastim is mainly a hospital-administered drug, anyway. But FDA may do so in future. “The standard for that [interchangeability] will include several years of real world use of the biosimilar, at least for the first ones,” opines Michael McCaughan, co-founder at Washington, DC–based information services firm Prevision Policy. But whether Zarxio is in the meantime labeled “noninterchangeable,” playing into the hands of those seeking to block widespread biosimilar uptake, remains to be seen. “Drugs aren’t normally labeled for what they’re not,” says Gillian Woollett, senior vice president FDA Regulatory Strategy and Policy at Avalere Health in Washington, DC. But there’s little that’s normal or straightforward so far about the road to biosimilar approval in the US.

The fact that an advisory panel was called at all is the first clear sign that this class of products won’t sail onto the market without very close scrutiny; small-molecule generic drugs aren’t typically subject to advisory committees. But as FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation & Research director Janet Woodcock noted in opening remarks during the agency’s advisory committee meeting on Zarxio biosimilars represent “a different kind of development program” from what the agency has seen before. The unanimous vote in favor of Zarxio’s approval across all five of Neupogen’s licensed indications belies a detailed discussion within the  committee  as  to  whether  the  product could be deemed “biosimilar”—that is to say, with “no clinically meaningful differences… in terms of safety, purity and potency,” according to the agency’s definition.  The vote has been presented as a slam dunk, but there was much discussion leading up to it.

That’s not surprising, though. FDA advisory panels comprise mostly clinicians, accustomed to assessing clinical trials for safety and effec-tiveness, not to scrutinizing reams of analytical data and chemistry manufacturing and controls issues to determine biosimilarity. “A cognitive change has to occur within the agency, the pharmaceutical industry, and in the minds of clinicians and patients,” notes Leah Christl, FDA’s associate director for therapeutic biologics. Indeed, FDA officials were “highly supportive” of Novartis and its application, writes Prevision Policy co-founder Ramsey Baghdadi in a January 7 research note, and “steered the committee away from letting minor concerns turn into major hurdles.”

Still, warns Sanford C. Bernstein’s Ronny Gal, if advisory committees become a regular feature of biosimilar reviews, “their composition will have to change to include more protein scientists and animal pharmacologists. If they continue to focus on phase 3 data, it will be tougher for biosimilars to go through.”

Sandoz isn’t hanging around for the uncertainties to be resolved. Launching this first biosimilar will require the same kind of marketing and educational support as a branded drug, at least for now. Zarzio, as the drug is called in Europe, benefited from such preparedness and is now the region’s leading daily filgrastim, with 30% volume market share. Sandoz believes the US system will eventually adopt products that can save costs. Indeed, FDA’s Woodcock’s remarks at the committee included likening the potential impact of biosimilars on the healthcare system to that of small-molecule generics. Zarxio’s approval won’t open the floodgates to US biosimilars. The next in line for approval is an infliximab biosimilar made by Incheon, Korea–based Celltrion, with Hospira as the exclusive commercialization partner. It is a copy of Johnson & Johnson’s rheumatoid arthritis drug Remicade and is a far more complex molecule than filgrastim. Also, it lacks the extensive usage data that Sandoz was able to show for Zarxio, which is believed to have reassured the panel, regardless of the strength of the analytical data. Celltrion and Hospira have been selling biosimilar infliximab (as Remsima and Inflectra) in Europe only since September 2013, and only in some Central and Eastern European markets.

Infliximab’s review will test how far FDA is prepared to go in allowing extrapolation between indications. Remicade is indicated for eight very different  diseases,  including  rheumatoid  arthritis,  Crohn’s  disease and ulcerative colitis. In Europe, the biosimilar was approved for these indications, based on clinical trial data from only two. That might be tougher to achieve in the US, where the drug will face a biosimilar-naive Arthritis Advisory Committee. Toronto-based Apotex and Ahmedabad, India–based Intas Biopharmaceuticals with a biosimilar of Amgen’s Neulasta (pegfilgrastim) and Hospira with a biosimilar of Amgen’s Epogen (epoetin alfa) are the two other known applicants.

Amgen, facing biosimilar assaults on several of its products, announced its own biosimilar development pipeline. Even without that, though, the company will likely use bundling and rebates to leverage its portfolio and market position and defend against any single biosimilar competitor. “It will take time for the first biosimilar to gain share. If Zarxio gets to 30% in three years, it would be a good result,” says Gal.

Melanie Senior London

Events

calendar3Lots of events coming up — you’ll need your passport.

 

 

China Bio Partnering Forum
April 15-16, Kerry Hotel, Pudong, Shanghai, China
https://www.ebdgroup.com/cbpf/index.php

Legislative Day Fly-in 2015
April 14-15, Washington DC
https://www.bio.org/events/conferences/fly-overview

BIO IP Counsels Committee Conference
April 15-17, The Four Seasons, St. Louis, Missouri
https://www.bio.org/events/conferences/fly-overview

2015 Food and Drug Law Institute Annual Conference
April 20-21, Grand Hyatt Washington, Washington DC
https://www.fdli.org/annual2015

BioBasics Biotech for the Non-Scientist
April 23-24, Duane Morris Office, Boston, Massachusetts
https://biotechprimer.com/events/biobasics-boston-ma/

2015 Inaugural Evolve Biomed Conference
April 29-30, Dublin, Ireland
https://www.biospace.com/calendar_event_details

BioTrinity 2015 European BioPartnering and Investment Conference
May 11-13, Novotel London West
https://www.biospace.com/calendar

BioEquity Europ 2015
May 19-20, Vienna, Austria
https://www.biocentury.com/conferences/bioequityeurope/dates

 

Big data for innovation

DataI attended the Global Young Scientists Summit held January 18-23 in Singapore. On Wednesday of that week, a group of eminent scientists sat on a panel titled “Turning Insights into Innovation” and said researchers will achieve the most success by working on questions that excite them intellectually, rather than by limiting themselves to problems with immediate practical applications.

The panel was chaired by Professor Arnoud de Meyer, president of Singapore Management University (SMU), and comprised Nobel Laureates Aaron Ciechanover (Chemistry, 2004) and Michael Levitt (Chemistry, 2013), Turing Award winner Shafi Goldwasser (2012), and Millennium Technology Prize winner Michael Grätzel (2010).

Because government funders of research typically want a return on their investment, scientists are increasingly expected to commercialize their work. But Professor Ciechanover’s discovery of ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation (a mechanism used in cells to degrade and recycle proteins), for example, was purely curiosity-driven.

“I never thought about a disease, I never thought about a drug. I only thought about the biological question,” Ciechanover said on the panel, adding that ubiquitin’s role in diseases such as cancer and neurodegenerative disorders became apparent only later. Today, many pharmaceutical companies are developing drugs to target this pathway.

Professor Levitt, who pioneered computational methods for understanding the structures of biological molecules such as DNA and proteins, said that governments would probably get a much higher return on their investment if they gave scientists the freedom to explore questions that interested them.

“It seems to me that if any one government says we are, from now onwards, going to force all our scientists to have a very clear metric, to be definitely involved in translation – all that would happen is the best scientists would leave the country and that country’s economy will crash,” Levitt said.

The panel also commented on whether the ready availability of big data has changed the nature and practice of science. “I think this is a very big question of whether there is a role now for the individual scientist, or whether you can just go and throw your bait into the ocean of data and some fish will be caught,” said Ciechanover.

Although non-hypothesis-driven research has certainly become a lot easier to carry out, Ciechanover said he doesn’t believe that big data will fundamentally change the nature of scientific thinking. “There is a lot of discussion about the role of big science versus old, classical science, and I think that at the end of the day the pendulum will stop in the middle,” he said.

Professor Goldwasser, whose theoretical work has formed the basis of modern cryptography methods, added that big data presented yet another opportunity for innovation. “[Big data] doesn’t threaten scientists but it does change the landscape. It’s fascinating what you can find,” she said.

Agreeing, Professor Grätzel, who is known for his invention of dye-sensitized solar cells, which are an efficient and low cost alternative to standard silicon photovoltaics, said that original ideas were key to the translation of academic research. “You have to have a unique selling proposition,” he said. “The basic reason why someone would set up a company is that you have something unique to offer.”

Governments and universities must, however, strike a balance between commercializing research and maintaining an environment that still encourages innovation. “When you license something very quickly, you may be lucky but you’re going to kill a lot of nascent technologies on the way,” said Levitt. “You really have to be very respectful of new ideas – startup companies are very delicate objects.”

The conference was organized by the National Research Foundation of Singapore in collaboration with its partners.

Sim Shuzhen 

Biotech for the poor

???????????Genetic engineering started in the early seventies. It was called then Recombinant DNA Technology. The first successful experiment in genetic engineering was performed by Herbert Boyer, who expressed the insulin gene in Escherichia coli. Over the last four decades, the pharmaceutical industry has grown into a multi-billion-dollar sector, and in agriculture, more than 170 million hectares have been cultivated with genetically modified plants.

This occurred because the National Institutes of Health established very early on rules to assure the safety of the work done with this nascent technology. This after the Asilomar Conference that took place in San Diego, 1975, asked for a moratorium on use of the technology, fearing that use of virus vectors might harm humans. While there have been a few lethal cases in the pharmaceutical area due to viral vectors, there have been none in agriculture, and no harm to the environment.

In Brazil the development of biotechnology, as we call it today, flourished in agribusiness, to the benefit of six major corporations: Monsanto, Bayer, Syngenta, BASF, Dupont/Pioneer and Dow. Together these companies are responsible for the cultivation of more than 40 million hectares of GM crops in Brazil, second in the world only to the United States. This is about 20% of the total grain production in Brazil and about 22% of the whole Gm crop production in the world.

Yet we cannot say the same with respect to the pharmaceutical sector, where large corporations do not invest in Brazil. We have never produced one blockbuster molecule locally, we have never registered one molecule at the FDA, and we do not have a large-scale  infrastructure to work with gene expression in bacteria, yeast or Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. Brazil simply does not innovate in the pharmaceutical sector. We import, formulate and sell drugs. Every year we buy from foreign countries billions of dollars of drugs to satisfy our demand.

In this blog I’ve said that we have to change paradigms, and build a competitive pharmaceutical industry in Brazil. Is this important for financial reasons only? Of course not. It is absolutely necessary for each country to have a strong pharmaceutical industry, but the benefits of biotech have not yet reached the poor. It needs to, and this is possible if we begin to express genes in plants. To our advantage, we can already express genes from any organism in other organisms, including plants and the milk of mammals. It can be done.

The question is, Who will benefit from it? In Brazil, agribusiness properties – which are quite large, more than 300 hectares apiece – take up 76% of the entire agricultural land. This group received last year US$40 billion to finance their crops.

Family farmers have property that occupies the other 24% of agricultural land, though their plots can be as small as 20 hectares. This family group received US$6.4 billion last year, and with this money produced most of the food consumed in Brazil.

The food produced by family farmers corresponds to close to 40% of the revenues coming from agriculture in Brazil; the large properties produce 60% (that group also produces feed for local animal consumption and commodities, mostly for export). So US$6.4 billion generates 40% of the agricultural product for consumption as food, and US$40 billion generates 60% of the agricultural products for food animal consumption and also commodities, mostly to be exported.

Our proposal is to take biotechnology to some of the family farmers to add value to their products, while expressing molecules for the pharmaceutical sector to strengthen this industry.

Luiz Antonio Barreto de Castro