What next for biosimilars? Five key questions…
Following the launch of Humira biosimilars
in Europe in 2018, and seeing their adoption outpace
the adoption of previous biosimilars launched in Europe, the question now
becomes; what next? Now that Humira biosimilars are here, in Europe at least,
it’s perhaps time to think about where the biosimilars market is headed and ask
what we can expect in terms of challenges, opportunities and market evolution.
Will
procurement policies become more sustainable in the future?
Aggressive discounting has been a highly
successful tactic in driving biosimilar adoption in Europe. Take the discount offered by Orion Pharma in Norway, when they offered a discount of over 70%. This set
the benchmark. Deep discounting became the new normal. For Humira
biosimilars, NHS England took the lead on procurement and implemented a unique
strategy which focused on two key objectives; plurality and best price. A key
driver of this innovative strategy was a desire to create a sustainable market for
Humira biosimilars and not just focus on the lowest cost product. Looking to
the future it remains to be if other countries adopt the same sustainable
approach. As Warwick Smith, director general of the British Biosimilars
Association (BBA), said at Medicines for Europe’s
annual biosimilars conference in Amsterdam (March 2019), “There was a
recognition that we need a competitive system, not a race to the bottom where
the lowest-price manufacturer takes everything. There has been a learning that
if you just drive competition on price, it eventually drives out competition.”
Will
biosimilar to biosimilar switching become more common?
While a number of studies have been
conducted to support brand to
biosimilar switching, no clinical data exists which supports biosimilar to
biosimilar switching. In markets which operate ‘winner-takes-all’ national
tenders, such as many of the Scandinavian countries, biosimilars have begun to
be treated as effectively interchangeable with other biosimilars and the
reference product. Take the infliximab market in Norway as an example. Since
the beginning of 2017 the market has switched from Pfizer’s Inflectra to Orion
Pharma’s Remsima three times. Moreover, at the beginning of 2018 Finland moved
all patients back on to Remicade due to getting a better price from Merck
Sharpe & Dohme. Outside of markets that operate ‘winner-take-all’ tenders
it remains to be seen if there will be the same level of biosimilar to
biosimilar switching. However, with focus now shifting to more sustainable
procurement policies, where multiple biosimilars can compete in the same
market, the chances of biosimilar to biosimilar switching is likely to increase
significantly.
How
will the US biosimilars market evolve over the coming years?
The US has been called a failed
biosimilars market due to the poor biosimilar adoption rates seen thus far.
Certain stakeholders have called for the US to give up on biosimilars and
instead focus on regulating originator drug prices after patents and other
market exclusivities have expired. There is also the challenge from the Trump
administration which believes that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) should be struck
down in the courts, thereby preventing the US Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) from approving any biosimilars via the 351(k) pathway, which is a key
component of the ACA. Within the FDA there are also challenges related to the
finalisation of its interchangeable biosimilars guideline. Outside of these
challenges, the US has some big biosimilar launches to look forward to. In 2023
a slew of Humira biosimilars are set to come to market following AbbVie settling
with a number of Humira biosimilar developers, including Sandoz
and Pfizer.
Then in 2029 (or sooner, depending on the outcome
of a law suit between Amgen and Sandoz), a number of Enbrel biosimilars can
come to market, including Eticovo (Samsung Bioepis) and Erelzi (Sandoz).
What
bets are biosimilar companies making on the next wave of biosimilar
opportunities?
Notwithstanding the big biosimilar launches
expected in the US over the next decade, the second wave of biosimilar launches
is reaching its climax. In many countries around the world we now have
biosimilar versions of Remicade, Enbrel, Rituxan/MabThera, Herceptin and
Humira. Biosimilar versions of Avastin are also expected to be launched in the
next 12-18 months following the expiry of Avastin’s key patent (2020
in Europe and the US). All eyes are
now on the next wave of biosimilar opportunities. Those branded biologics which
lose patent protection in key markets beyond 2020. These include checkpoint
inhibitors, such as Keytruda (pembrolizumab; Merck & Co.), which are used
in the treatment of various cancers; anti-interleukins, such as Stelara
(ustekinumab ) and Cosentyx (secukinumab; Novartis), which are used to treat
psoriasis; and anti-VEGFs, such as Lucentis (ranibizumab; Roche/Novartis) and
Eylea (aflibercept; Sanofi/Regeneron), used to treat various ophthalmological
conditions. There is also a significant amount of interest in developing
biosimilars of orphan drugs following Generium Pharmaceuticals obtaining Russian
approval for its biosimilar version of Soliris (eculizumab; Alexion). In
terms of anti-interleukin and ophthalmological biosimilars, German biosimilars
company Formycon has invested in both areas. In May 2017 the company announced
that it was developing a biosimilar version of Stelara. Progress is also being
made on ranibizumab
and aflibercept biosimilars.
What
tactics – commercial or developmental – will companies focus on in the future?
Ultimately the tactics a biosimilar company
selects can be boiled down to ones that either focus on enhancing the brand at
its most basic level (i.e. its clinical profile) or improving the commercial
proposition of the brand. Fundamentally the mix of commercial and developmental
tactics which companies decide to implement as part of a biosimilar brand’s
commercialisation strategy need to be customized to the type of product being
developed, its target indication, patient type and the country in which the
product is to be sold. Similar to the development of a biosimilar, there can be
no ‘one size fits all’ commercial strategy. Commercial tactics tend to be quicker,
cheaper and more responsive to market change compared to developmental tactics,
but the overall aim of both approaches is the same; to drive differentiation in
the eyes of end-users, such as patients, physicians and payers, so that the
company’s biosimilar is used preferentially ahead of other options.
Whether you’re a seasoned biosimilars professional, or just starting out on your biosimilars journey, it’s important to keep up to date with what’s happening in the biosimilars market. With commercialisation of biosimilars now moving front and centre of the debate, Pharma IQ’s Biosimilars Commercialisation Summit (Amsterdam; May 14-16, 2019) will provide a timely forum to debate some of the most critical, market shaping issues. After all, it’s the only biosimilars conference dedicated to the commercialisation of biosimilars.