India's Cadila launches first cheaper
copy of world's top-selling drug
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[December 09, 2014] MUMBAI
(Reuters) - Indian drugmaker Cadila Healthcare Ltd said on Tuesday it
launched in India the first biosimilar version of the anti-inflammatory
medicine adalimumab, the world's top-selling drug, at a fifth of its
U.S. price.
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The drug's branded version is sold under the name Humira by U.S.
firm AbbVie Inc, and costs $1,000 for a vial in the United States.
Humira had sales of $3.26 billion in the quarter ended September,
accounting for 65 percent of AbbVie's total revenue.
A price of $200 a vial would still keep the drug out of reach for
most people in India, where more than 70 percent of the population
lives on less than $2 a day and health insurance is scarce.
Biosimilars are cheaper copies of biotech drugs - medicines made
from proteins and other large molecules.
Cadila expects sales of between 1 billion rupees ($16.16 million)
and 2 billion rupees from its biosimilar of Humira in the Indian
market, Deputy Managing Director Sharvil Patel told Reuters.
The company will launch its version under the name Exemptia for
treating diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile idiopathic
arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and ankylosing spondylitis.
About 12 million people in India suffer from these disorders, Cadila
said in a statement.
"We are working towards being among the first wave of the launch of
this drug's biosimilars globally," Patel said, adding he does not
expect any domestic competition on the drug "in short term."
The company expects to launch the medicine in the United States in
2019, he said.
Humira's U.S. patent will expire in late 2016 and AbbVie has said it
will take years for other drugmakers to develop and win approval for
their own generic versions.
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Cadila has meetings scheduled with the U.S. and Europe regulators
next year, Patel said. "It's a very attractive market, there are
many, many companies working on this product."
Biosimilars are expected to account for about one quarter of the
$100 billion worth of sales stemming from off-patent biological
drugs by the end of the decade, a study compiled by Thomson Reuters
BioWorld said in September.
Several hundred companies around the world are chasing the
biosimilars market, including Indian generic drugmakers Dr Reddy's
Laboratories Ltd, Cipla Ltd and Lupin Ltd.
(Reporting by Zeba Siddiqui in Mumbai; Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee
and Anupama Dwivedi)
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