Sonia Gandhi, Dhananjay Patankar, Smita Kashiramka, Anurag S. Rathore
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The economics of translating a biosimilar from lab to market in India
This study aims to establish a cost basis for biologics manufacturers and policymakers by quantifying the price and time required to bring a biosimilar from the lab to market. For efficient implementation of a cost-based policy, especially for life-saving medicines like biosimilars, it is imperative to establish a benchmark for the cost involved in biosimilar development. In this holistic and multiple-case study, stage-wise cost estimates of biosimilar development were obtained for microbial and mammalian systems. The investigation of six biopharmaceutical companies based in India concluded that biosimilar development through the microbial system costs ∼18 million USD and ∼21 million USD for the mammalian system. Additionally, 45–50 million USD is required as a one-time capital investment. Further, US/EU authorization can cost ∼25 million USD per product. Clinical studies are the most expensive and account for 60%–70% of total development cost. The presented information can serve as a basis for implementing cost-based pricing in countries like India and reimbursement policies for biosimilars under Medicare Part B in the United States.
期刊介绍:
Published on behalf of the New York Academy of Sciences, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences provides multidisciplinary perspectives on research of current scientific interest with far-reaching implications for the wider scientific community and society at large. Each special issue assembles the best thinking of key contributors to a field of investigation at a time when emerging developments offer the promise of new insight. Individually themed, Annals special issues stimulate new ways to think about science by providing a neutral forum for discourse—within and across many institutions and fields.