Pfizer hit some unexpected roadblocks
with its first U.S. biosimilar launch, but it’s not giving up in the
budding field. Now, the drugmaker is launching biosims to three Roche
cancer blockbusters at discounts ranging from 22% to 24%.
The company has already rolled
out Zirabev and Ruxience, its biosimilars to Roche’s Avastin and
Rituxan, respectively, at discounts of 23% and 24%. On February 15, it’s
planning to launch Herceptin biosimilar Trazimera at a 22% discount,
the company said Thursday.
All three Roche meds are already facing
U.S. biosimilar competition and pulled in more than $10 billion
combined at peak. For its part, Pfizer says it’ll be the first company
to market three oncology monoclonal antibody biosimilars in the U.S.
The drugmaker has been active in the
U.S. biosim market, starting with its Inflectra launch in October 2016.
That copycat to Johnson & Johnson’s blockbuster immunology med
Remicade hit the market at a 15% discount and couldn’t gain traction
against the entrenched competition.
Pfizer later sued J&J for
making “anticompetitive” deals with payers that blocked out biosimilar
competition. Pfizer said J&J tied Remicade’s rebates to the
stipulation that payers don’t use biosimilars, while J&J hit back
that Pfizer hadn’t offered enough value to win business.
U.S. sales for Inflectra have picked up
somewhat and reached $208 million in the first nine months of 2019.
Still, that’s compared to a much bigger $2.32 billion haul for Remicade
over the same span.
Since that rollout, Pfizer has also
launched Retacrit, a biosim to J&J’s Procrit and Amgen’s Epogen.
That copycat hit the market in November 2018 at a 33% discount. On an
October conference call, Pfizer’s biopharma chief Angela Hwang
said Retacrit had nabbed 16% of market share, the most of any biosim in
the U.S.
That experience has “given us the
opportunity to learn about what it will take to launch oncology
biosimilars as well as what we can expect in this particular space,” she
said on the call.
Pfizer will be entering a competitive
market with its newest biosims. Roche’s Rituxan already faces
competition from the Teva-Celltrion team, while Avastin is facing off
against a copycat from Amgen and Allergan. Herceptin faces competition
from that same Amgen-Allergan duo, plus another in Mylan-Biocon.
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