Business Standard

Biosimilar mkt on growth path as top drugs double in size

- SOHINI DAS

As the domestic market wakes up to a wider use of biologic drugs and as patient compliance improves, the biosimilar­s segment is seeing a higher growth of late.

Data shows while the overall biosimilar­s category has clocked a 10.3 per cent value compound annual growth rate (CAGR) over the past few years, the market size for the top molecule has more than doubled.

A biologic drug is produced from living organisms or contains components of living organisms, unlike chemical drugs. A biosimilar is a copy-cat of a biologic drug, once the patent period ends. The moving annual turover (MAT) for biosimilar molecules sold in the domestic market as on August 2019 stood at ~1,498 crore as per data from market research firm AIOCD AWACS, up 34 per cent from ~1,117 crore in August 2016.

The value CAGR for the period is 10.3 per cent, while the volume CAGR is 3 per cent.

During the same period, the domestic pharma market clocked 7.7 per cent value CAGR and 1.9 per cent volume CAGR. Leading molecules — Adalimumab, Bevacizuma­b, Rituximab and Trastuzuma­b — have seen their market sizes more than double during the period from ~243 crore MAT in August 2016 to ~551.3 crore in August.

Adalimumab is a rheumatoid arthritis drug, Bevacizuma­b is used for several types of cancer, Rituximab is used for certain auto-immune diseases as well as some forms of cancer while Trastuzuma­b is used for breast cancer.

Pankaj Patel, chairman of Cadila Healthcare, which is one of the leading biosimilar­s players in the country, said, “Patient compliance in biologics drugs has improved in recently with the prices coming within the reach of many. Indian companies have started investing in creating a meaningful pipeline. The Indian market has always seen price elasticity in such segments.” Patient compliance basically means that patients put on these medicines are not dropping off the therapy after sometime, and more compliant towards finishing it. “If one sees the new drug pipeline of major drug firms, it would have a growing list of biologic drugs.”

Cadila Healthcare’s biologics pipeline comprises 21 biosimilar­s and six novel biologic entities (both in developmen­t stage as well as launched) and covers therapeuti­c areas such as oncology, autoimmune disease, nephrology, ophthalmol­ogy, inflammati­on, rheumatolo­gy, hepatology and infectious disease, among others. So far, Cadila Healthcare has invested ~350 crore in its biologics facility, noted Edelweiss.

The company aims to launch two molecules each year, it said. These drugs are expensive and earlier used to see low patient compliance. For example, in 2014, when Cadila Healthcare launched the generic version of innovator Abbvie’s Humira, it priced it at one-fifth of the price of the innovator drug. Humira cost $1,000 per vial. Cadila Healthcare’s Exemptia is the market leader in the segment in India now followed by Torrent’s Adfrar.

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