The Path Towards a Tailored Clinical Biosimilar Development.


Journal

BioDrugs : clinical immunotherapeutics, biopharmaceuticals and gene therapy
ISSN: 1179-190X
Titre abrégé: BioDrugs
Pays: New Zealand
ID NLM: 9705305

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Jun 2020
Historique:
pubmed: 9 4 2020
medline: 27 1 2021
entrez: 9 4 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Since the first approval of a biosimilar medicinal product in 2006, scientific understanding of the features and development of biosimilar medicines has accumulated. This review scrutinizes public information on development programs and the contribution of the clinical studies for biosimilar approval in the European Union (EU) and/or the United States (US) until November 2019. The retrospective evaluation of the programs that eventually obtained marketing authorization and/or licensure revealed that in 95% (36 out of 38) of all programs, the comparative clinical efficacy studies confirmed similarity. In the remaining 5% (2 out of 38), despite meeting efficacy outcomes, the biosimilar candidates exhibited clinical differences in immunogenicity that required changes to the manufacturing process and additional clinical studies to enable biosimilar approval. Both instances of clinical differences in immunogenicity occurred prior to 2010, and the recurrence of these cases is unlikely today due to state-of-the-art assays and improved control of process-related impurities. Biosimilar candidates that were neither approved in the EU nor in the US were not approved due to reasons other than clinical confirmation of efficacy. This review of the development history of biosimilars allows the proposal of a more efficient and expedited biosimilar development without the routine need for comparative clinical efficacy and/or pharmacodynamic studies and without any compromise in quality, safety, or efficacy. This proposal is scientifically valid, consistent with regulation of all biologics, and maintains robust regulatory standards in the assessment of biosimilar candidates. Note: The findings and conclusion of this paper are limited to biosimilar products developed against the regulatory standards in the EU and the US.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32266678
doi: 10.1007/s40259-020-00422-1
pii: 10.1007/s40259-020-00422-1
pmc: PMC7211192
doi:

Substances chimiques

Biosimilar Pharmaceuticals 0

Types de publication

Journal Article Review

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

297-306

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Auteurs

Martin Schiestl (M)

Sandoz GmbH, Biochemiestrasse 10, 6336, Langkampfen, Austria. martin.schiestl@sandoz.com.

Gopinath Ranganna (G)

Mylan Pharm. Private Ltd., Bengaluru, India.

Keith Watson (K)

Celltrion Inc., Incheon, Republic of Korea.

Byoungin Jung (B)

Samsung Bioepis Co. Ltd., Incheon, Republic of Korea.

Karsten Roth (K)

Polpharma Biologics S.A., Warsaw, Poland.

Björn Capsius (B)

Formycon AG, Martinsried, Germany.

Michael Trieb (M)

bioeq GmbH, Holzkirchen, Germany.

Peter Bias (P)

Teva Pharm. Ind. Ltd., Ulm, Germany.

Julie Maréchal-Jamil (J)

IGBA, Geneva, Switzerland.

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Classifications MeSH