The biosimilar age for rheumatology has arrived, and experts expect wider use of previously expensive biologic drugs as biosimilar competition drives prices down and makes biologics more affordable.
An infliximab biosimilar became the first such agent to arrive onto the European market in the second half of 2013, and by the start of 2014, it was already having an impact by, for example, dropping the cost of infliximab by a third in Norway. Norway may have received the biggest biosimilar effect so far because it runs an annual auction for the best prices on competing drugs from manufacturers and then mandates Norwegian clinicians to prescribe the lowest-price option when starting a new therapy.
A U.S. version of this scenario may soon follow. In August 2014, Celltrion and Hospira, the two companies jointly producing and marketing biosimilar forms of infliximab under the names Remsima and Inflectra (in parts of eastern Europe and elsewhere), announced they had submitted a marketing application to the Food and Drug Administration. In the announcement, Celltrion officials said they expected Food and Drug Administration approval within a year. If that were to happen, and if Celltrion mounts a successful patent challenge, the Remsima form of infliximab could become one of the first biosimilars on the U.S. market. (In July, Sandoz – a subsidiary of Novartis – announced it submitted an FDA application for Zarzio, a biosimilar version of filgrastim that until now has been only available as Neupogen, a granulocyte colony–stimulating factor. Biosimilar filgrastim seems like the only contender that could edge out Remsima as the first biosimilar on the U.S. market.)
At least two more biosimilars – a third form of infliximab, and a new form of etanercept – may come next, although rheumatologists following the field caution that additional studies are needed on top of what was reported for these two biosimilars last June at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
Lower cost broadens use
With one rheumatology biosimilar already on several global formularies and others nearing that status, the next challenge is convincing clinicians that cut-rate biologics are safe and effective and patients can switch from the brand-name form to a biosimilar without adverse effects. Meanwhile, payers and patients are pressing for biosimilars to cut the high cost of biologic treatment. By making biologic drugs more affordable for more patients, introduction of biosimilars will change patient care, experts said.
“A decrease in price will change how biologics are used in U.S. patients. In the United States today, about half of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients receive a biologic,” a rate substantially below where it should be, said Dr. Vibeke Strand, a biopharmaceutical consultant and rheumatologist at Stanford (Calif.) University. “Biosimilars will have a very big impact,” she predicted.
“Clinicians are under a lot of pressure from pharmacies, hospitals, and managed-care organization to avoid expensive medications when possible. Starting a biologic will become easier,” when prices start falling. And adherence may also improve. “Part of why patients don’t take their biologics for more than 1-2 years is they can’t afford the copay. That may change” if prices drop, Dr. Strand said in an interview.
Before biosimilars became available, “countries with low GDPs [gross domestic products] had less access to biologics and more restrictions; richer countries had better access,” noted Dr. Tore K. Kvien, a rheumatologist and professor of rheumatology at the University of Oslo.
Greater affordability and access to biologics is the sole factor driving the biosimilar movement. “Cost is the only reason why you have biosimilars,” noted Dr. Bruce N. Cronstein, a rheumatologist and professor of medicine, pathology, and pharmacology at New York University. Aside from cost, there are, by definition, no meaningful differences between a biosimilar and the reference brand-name formulation.
Biosimilars, Dr. Cronstein said, “will be cheaper, but it won’t be like the difference with generic and brand-name statins. You won’t see a 90% price drop. Maybe we’ll see a 30% or 40% price cut, which is considerable. The biologics are all very expensive drugs. But biosimilars will not lead to anything like the savings with small generic molecules.”
While Dr. Cronstein noted that there are no guarantees regarding the timing of price changes, the extent of price cuts, or how competition might affect pricing of the brand-name alternative, the experience in Norway showed a quick, one-third price cut when Remsima became an option, Dr. Kvien said in an interview. For years, Norway has negotiated 1-year contracts for setting drug costs with manufacturers. Norwegian officials invite competitors to submit bids in an annual auction. Celltrion won the auction to make Remsima the infliximab of choice in Norway during 2014 for all six European Medicines Agency (EMA)-approved infliximab indications: rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, psoriatic arthritis, psoriasis, Crohn’s disease, and ulcerative colitis.