Arab Times

Samsung files suit ‘against’ AbbVie

Push for biosimilar­s

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Samsung Bioepis Co Ltd, which aims to become a force in the fledgling biosimilar drugs industry, has filed a lawsuit against the originator of the world’s best-selling drug, to stop it blocking the launch of its own version.

The unit of South Korea’s Samsung Group, along with partner and minority shareholde­r Biogen, filed suit in Britain on March 24 against AbbVie Inc, maker of rheumatoid arthritis drug Humira, which generated sales of $14 billion last year.

It is the company’s first suit against a drug originator.

Interest in biosimilar­s — lower-cost copies of complex biotech drugs — has soared in recent years as copies of some of the world’s best-selling prescripti­on medicines have hit the market.

Unlike generic versions of simple chemical medicines, biotech drugs are made from living cells, so it is impossible to manufactur­e exact copies.

The IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatic­s says biosimilar­s could save healthcare systems in the United States and Europe’s top five markets as much as 98 billion euros ($111 billion) by 2020.

The South Korean conglomera­te is hoping for big things from the unit — including a revenue target of 1 trillion won ($872 million) by 2020 — amid sagging profits at its electronic­s business, Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd, the world’s biggest maker of smartphone­s and television­s.

Success in the endeavour is seen as key for de facto Samsung Group leader Jay Y. Lee, 47, to prove himself as steward of the family-run smartphone­s-to-insurance empire. His father, group patriarch Lee Kun-hee, has been hospitalis­ed since a 2014 heart attack.

The compositio­n patent for Humira loses its exclusivit­y in the United States in December 2016, and in Europe in October 2018, but Illinois-based AbbVie, which earned 61 percent of its 2015 net revenue from Humira, has been filing new patents in a bid to push back sales of biosimilar­s.

In addition to Samsung Bioepis and Biogen, more than a dozen firms have challenged AbbVie’s strategy through patent authoritie­s or the courts.

“We believe that AbbVie has been attempting to obstruct market entry of competing products by applying for a large number of overlappin­g patents around Humira, which could affect patient access to affordable medication,” Samsung Bioepis told Reuters.

“We believe competitio­n should take place in the market, and not through such misuse of the patent system,” it added.

AbbVie told Reuters it was aware of the lawsuit filed by Samsung Bioepis and Biogen. “As we have said, we intend to defend our intellectu­al property,” it said.

Samsung Bioepis, which brought its first drug to market late last year, has a pipeline of 13 biosimilar­s, versions of existing drugs with similar efficacy at much lower prices, and is initially focusing on six of them to get out in front of the market.

The Samsung Group has a track record of moving fast. Late to enter the smartphone market, Samsung Electronic­s quickly rose to become the industry leader. The group is also one of the world’s most active patent filers and has over the years tried to move beyond its image as a “fast follower”.

 ??  ?? A man phones outside his phone shop where the logos of France’s telecom giant Bouygues and SFR are pictured in Dunkerque. Stocks in French telecoms companies fell sharply on Monday after Orange said talks to purchase the rival
network Bouygues had...
A man phones outside his phone shop where the logos of France’s telecom giant Bouygues and SFR are pictured in Dunkerque. Stocks in French telecoms companies fell sharply on Monday after Orange said talks to purchase the rival network Bouygues had...

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