Generic
copy of Roche flu pill Tamiflu hits U.S. market
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[December 12, 2016]
(Reuters) - The first generic copy
of Roche's top-selling flu pill Tamiflu hit the U.S. market on Monday,
marking a further step in the Swiss drugmaker's enforced evolution to
reliance on a new wave of blockbuster medicines.
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Unlisted generic drugmaker Alvogen, which developed the cut-price
version with India's Natco Pharma, said it expected the cheaper
product to save the U.S. healthcare system up to $500 million in the
upcoming flu season.
Over the years, Tamiflu has provided Roche with occasional windfall
profits as flu epidemics have led to spikes in demand, most notably
during global H1N1 swine flu outbreak in 2009 when revenue from the
drug hit almost $3 billion.
Since then sales have fallen back and Tamiflu is currently a
relatively small component of Roche's overall revenue, which reached
$37 billion in the first nine months of 2016.
Roche faces bigger generic challenges starting next year, when the
first so-called biosimilar versions of its injectable biotech cancer
drugs are expected to reach the market in Europe.
Its three established cancer blockbusters Rituxan, Herceptin and
Avastin, which account for annual sales of around $20 billion, all
face biosimilar competition by the end of the decade in major
markets.
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Roche is banking on success with a new batch of biotech drugs for
cancer and other serious diseases to help fill the gap.
(Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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