Search Results for "harmonization"

ASBM Exhibits at DIA 2018 Conference

June 30, 2018

From June 25-27, ASBM exhibited at the 2018 Drug Industry Association Conference (DIA 2018). ASBM was represented at DIA by Chair Madelaine Feldman MD, FACR and Advisory Board Chair Philip Schneider, MS FASHP.

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Dr. Schneider, left, and Dr. Feldman, right, met with conference attendees for three days at the ASBM booth, to discuss biosimilar policy issues including naming and substitution practices.

In addition to meeting attendees at ASBM’s booth, Drs. Feldman and Schneider attended several panels related to biosimilar policy, and engaged participants in discussions of key policy issues. For example:

At a panel on interchangeability, Dr. Feldman asked the FDA’s Leah Christl to clarify whether interchangeability would be transitive. That is, would the FDA would treat two biosimilars- each interchangeable with the same reference product -as interchangeable with each other? Dr. Christl clarified in her answer that no, interchangeability would only be granted to a biosimilar with respect to its reference product and not to another biosimilar, even one deemed interchangeable to that some reference product.

At a panel entitled Global Regulatory Strategies for Biosimilars, Dr. Schneider asked panelists if they supported global harmonization with distinct non-proprietary names and was met with universal support.

Later,  Dr. Schneider attended a panel entitled Biosimilar interchangeability: A global perspective. When he asked the panel about the value of distinct naming and international harmonization for improving pharmacovigilance and increasing biosimilar uptake, the panel agreed that real world evidence is critical to uptake and that harmonizing global nonproprietary names is vital in making this happen.

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Drs. Schneider and Feldman discuss the value of international harmonization of biologic nomenclature with Taiwanese FDA official Lien-Chien Chang.

In addition to the ASBM’s presence in the exhibit hall and at biosimilar sessions, an oped by ASBM executive director Michael Reilly was featured in Drug Industry News, a publication distributed to conference attendees.  ASBM also used print advertising and tabletop art  at the conference to promote its surveys of physicians in 12 countries and of US pharmacists, which show broad support for distinct naming of all biologics, including biosimilars.

 

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ASBM augmented its presence in the exhibit hall and at biosimilar sessions with advertising and an op-ed in Drug Industry News, a publication distributed to conference attendees. Each focused on the value of distinct biologic naming and international harmonization. 

 

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Conference attendees gather around a table in the refreshment area, on of several featuring ASBM survey data showing strong support for distinct naming among physicians worldwide. 

 

 

 

 


ASBM Exhibits at DIA 2018 Conference

June 30, 2018

From June 25-27, ASBM exhibited at the 2018 Drug Industry Association Conference (DIA 2018). ASBM was represented at DIA by Chair Madelaine Feldman MD, FACR and Advisory Board Chair Philip Schneider, MS FASHP.

img_2612
Dr. Schneider, left, and Dr. Feldman, right, met with conference attendees for three days at the ASBM booth, to discuss biosimilar policy issues including naming and substitution practices.

In addition to meeting attendees at ASBM’s booth, Drs. Feldman and Schneider attended several panels related to biosimilar policy, and engaged participants in discussions of key policy issues. For example:

At a panel on interchangeability, Dr. Feldman asked the FDA’s Leah Christl to clarify whether interchangeability would be transitive. That is, would the FDA would treat two biosimilars- each interchangeable with the same reference product -as interchangeable with each other? Dr. Christl clarified in her answer that no, interchangeability would only be granted to a biosimilar with respect to its reference product and not to another biosimilar, even one deemed interchangeable to that some reference product.

At a panel entitled Global Regulatory Strategies for Biosimilars, Dr. Schneider asked panelists if they supported global harmonization with distinct non-proprietary names and was met with universal support.

Later,  Dr. Schneider attended a panel entitled Biosimilar interchangeability: A global perspective. When he asked the panel about the value of distinct naming and international harmonization for improving pharmacovigilance and increasing biosimilar uptake, the panel agreed that real world evidence is critical to uptake and that harmonizing global nonproprietary names is vital in making this happen.

img_2633
Drs. Schneider and Feldman discuss the value of international harmonization of biologic nomenclature with Taiwanese FDA official Lien-Chien Chang.

In addition to the ASBM’s presence in the exhibit hall and at biosimilar sessions, an oped by ASBM executive director Michael Reilly was featured in Drug Industry News, a publication distributed to conference attendees.  ASBM also used print advertising and tabletop art  at the conference to promote its surveys of physicians in 12 countries and of US pharmacists, which show broad support for distinct naming of all biologics, including biosimilars.

 

img_2653
ASBM augmented its presence in the exhibit hall and at biosimilar sessions with advertising and an op-ed in Drug Industry News, a publication distributed to conference attendees. Each focused on the value of distinct biologic naming and international harmonization. 

 

img_2627
Conference attendees gather around a table in the refreshment area, on of several featuring ASBM survey data showing strong support for distinct naming among physicians worldwide. 

 

 

 

 


ASBM Meets with Patient Groups Worldwide at IAPO Conference

June 19, 2018

On May 23rd-24th, ASBM attended the International Alliance of Patients’ Organizations 8th Global Patients Congress.

The meeting was attended by approximately 80 different patient groups and 130 participants from around the globe which convene on a number of health topics—including sessions on how best to engage regulators worldwide and a 101 on biosimilar medicines. ASBM also hosted a booth which highlighted the importance of the harmonization of naming schemes for biologics and biosimilars and included a poster presentation of results from physicians in 12 countries surveyed by ASBM.  View the poster here.

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ASBM’s Niko Stemple (right) meets with a patient advocate.

At the meeting ASBM Steering Committee member and Global Colon Cancer Association Executive Director, Andrew Spiegel, was named as the Chair-elect to be IAPO Chairman in August of 2020.

“We send ASBM’s congratulations to Andy for his recognition as a top notch global patient advocate and look forward to his leadership at IAPO,” stated Dr. Madelaine Feldman, ASBM Chair. 

ASBM Welcomes New Member Esperantra

At the 2018 IAPO meeting, ASBM engaged with many patient organizations and as a result would like to welcome Esperantra to ASBM membership.

Esperantra is a non-profit organization created for the purpose of contributing to the reduction of cancer mortality in Peru by improving the quality of life of cancer patients, and advocating for equality in access to quality treatments and to innovative care.  Esperantra is the first organization of its kind to provide information and support, and to advocate on behalf of cancer patients through its different programs.  Their mission is to inform, educate and empower people to achieve a timely diagnosis through prevention programs and to access treatments to control the disease.

Through the meeting of Director Karla Ruiz De Castilla Yabar, ASBM learned that Esperantra has been following regulations in their country on biologic medicines and been active in giving lectures on the issue.

We welcome Esperantra to ASBM’s membership—especially as we tackle such global issues as the naming of biologics and biosimilars,” stated ASBM Executive Director, Michael Reilly.  “All patients, no matter what continent they live, should be able to benefit from knowing that their medicines are safe and effective. The harmonization of biologic naming will benefit all patients, no matter where they are being treated.”

Learn more about Esperantra here


ASBM Meets with Patient Groups Worldwide at IAPO Conference

June 19, 2018

On May 23rd-24th, ASBM attended the International Alliance of Patients’ Organizations 8th Global Patients Congress.

The meeting was attended by approximately 80 different patient groups and 130 participants from around the globe which convene on a number of health topics—including sessions on how best to engage regulators worldwide and a 101 on biosimilar medicines. ASBM also hosted a booth which highlighted the importance of the harmonization of naming schemes for biologics and biosimilars and included a poster presentation of results from physicians in 12 countries surveyed by ASBM.  View the poster here.

img_1522
ASBM’s Niko Stemple (right) meets with a patient advocate.

At the meeting ASBM Steering Committee member and Global Colon Cancer Association Executive Director, Andrew Spiegel, was named as the Chair-elect to be IAPO Chairman in August of 2020.

“We send ASBM’s congratulations to Andy for his recognition as a top notch global patient advocate and look forward to his leadership at IAPO,” stated Dr. Madelaine Feldman, ASBM Chair. 

ASBM Welcomes New Member Esperantra

At the 2018 IAPO meeting, ASBM engaged with many patient organizations and as a result would like to welcome Esperantra to ASBM membership.

Esperantra is a non-profit organization created for the purpose of contributing to the reduction of cancer mortality in Peru by improving the quality of life of cancer patients, and advocating for equality in access to quality treatments and to innovative care.  Esperantra is the first organization of its kind to provide information and support, and to advocate on behalf of cancer patients through its different programs.  Their mission is to inform, educate and empower people to achieve a timely diagnosis through prevention programs and to access treatments to control the disease.

Through the meeting of Director Karla Ruiz De Castilla Yabar, ASBM learned that Esperantra has been following regulations in their country on biologic medicines and been active in giving lectures on the issue.

We welcome Esperantra to ASBM’s membership—especially as we tackle such global issues as the naming of biologics and biosimilars,” stated ASBM Executive Director, Michael Reilly.  “All patients, no matter what continent they live, should be able to benefit from knowing that their medicines are safe and effective. The harmonization of biologic naming will benefit all patients, no matter where they are being treated.”

Learn more about Esperantra here


ASBM Presents on Naming at World Biosimilar Congress USA 2018

June 12, 2018

On May 24th, ASBM presented at the World Biosimilars Congress USA 2018 in San Diego, CA. The theme of the two-day conference was “Helping the global industry bring biosimilars to the US” and it drew more than 100 attendees including representatives from the industry, health care professionals, and payers.

ASBM Advisory Chair Philip Schneider gave a presentation entitled “Biologic nomenclature: Implementation of an internationally harmonized system”. The presentation offered an overview of the state of international harmonization in the area of biologic naming, including examination of the naming policies of major national regulators and views of health professionals worldwide regarding the need for all biologics, including biosimilars to have distinct non-proprietary names.

Dr. Schneider discussed the feasibility of four-letter suffixes -as proposed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and enacted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)- in addressing this need. He also offered his observations from ASBM’s April 11th naming forum in Washington, DC and his April 30th meeting with WHO in Geneva, emphasizing the importance of the WHO assuming a leadership role on this issue:

“International harmonization is key to building a strong global system of pharmacovigilance, and countries without robust pharmacovigilance systems in place may benefit the most from distinct naming and international harmonization. WHO leadership is essential to achieve this and avoid further proliferation of country-specific naming schemes.”

View Dr. Schneider’s presentation here. 


ASBM Presents on Naming at World Biosimilar Congress USA 2018

June 12, 2018

On May 24th, ASBM presented at the World Biosimilars Congress USA 2018 in San Diego, CA. The theme of the two-day conference was “Helping the global industry bring biosimilars to the US” and it drew more than 100 attendees including representatives from the industry, health care professionals, and payers.

ASBM Advisory Chair Philip Schneider gave a presentation entitled “Biologic nomenclature: Implementation of an internationally harmonized system”. The presentation offered an overview of the state of international harmonization in the area of biologic naming, including examination of the naming policies of major national regulators and views of health professionals worldwide regarding the need for all biologics, including biosimilars to have distinct non-proprietary names.

Dr. Schneider discussed the feasibility of four-letter suffixes -as proposed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and enacted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)- in addressing this need. He also offered his observations from ASBM’s April 11th naming forum in Washington, DC and his April 30th meeting with WHO in Geneva, emphasizing the importance of the WHO assuming a leadership role on this issue:

“International harmonization is key to building a strong global system of pharmacovigilance, and countries without robust pharmacovigilance systems in place may benefit the most from distinct naming and international harmonization. WHO leadership is essential to achieve this and avoid further proliferation of country-specific naming schemes.”

View Dr. Schneider’s presentation here. 


ASBM Presents at 66th WHO Naming Meeting

May 18, 2018

On May 1st, ASBM Executive Director, Michael Reilly, Esq. and Advisory Board Chair, Philip Schneider, MS, FASHP; presented before the 66th Consultation on International Nonproprietary Names (INN) for Pharmaceutical Substances in Geneva, Switzerland. This was the tenth INN Consultation at which ASBM has presented since 2013. 

While the discussions in the Open Session at which ASBM presented are bound by confidentiality agreements pending the publication of an Executive Summary by the INN Programme, the Executive Summary for the 65th INN Consultation may be viewed here.

The day prior to the meeting, ASBM met with  Asst. Director-General Mariângela Simão; Head of Regulation of Medicines and other Health Technologies Emer Cooke, and INN Programme Manager Rafaella Balocco, to discuss the status of the BQ proposal. In July 2014, the INN Expert Group put forward the BQ recommendation for a distinguishable naming approach, however to date, this policy has yet to be implemented. Should the WHO advance the BQ proposal, it would give other nations around the world a model that they may choose to adopt, thereby creating a world standard.

ASBM surveys have shown strong support for distinct naming among physicians worldwide. Sixty-six percent of U.S. physicians surveyed support distinct naming for all biologics including biosimilars, as do 68% of Canadian and 79% of Australian physicians. Among physicians in Latin America, 94% believe the WHO’s BQ proposal would be helpful in ensuring their patients receive the correct medicine.

In addition, the April 11 meeting on Harmonization of Biologic Nomenclature sponsored by ASBM revealed strong stakeholder support both for distinct naming and for international harmonization of naming systems; participants agreed that WHO involvement was necessary to advance these aims. The meeting included representatives from FDA, Health Canada, physician societies, pharmacists, and patient advocacy organizations.

 


Naming Tool for Biologic Medicines Released; Ensures Compliance with FDA, WHO Standards

February 8, 2018

For Immediate Release

Naming Tool for Biologic Medicines Released;  Ensures Compliance with FDA, WHO Standards

Arlington, VA (February 8, 2018)

 

The Alliance for Safe Biologic Medicines (ASBM) announced today that it has developed a web-based tool for the naming of biologic medicines to quickly ensure compliance with naming standards set forth by the FDA and World Health Organization (WHO). The tool, called “SuffixAudit”, will be made available to regulators and manufacturers.

 

Biologic medicines are complex molecules engineered to treat serious and chronic conditions including rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, and cancer. Lower-cost versions of these medicines, known as biosimilars, are becoming available but unlike generics, they are not exact copies of their reference product. These inherent differences have caused health regulators worldwide to make clear product identification a priority. “The distinct naming of all biologics, including biosimilars, allows regulators to accurately track products, ensure their continued safety and efficacy, and attribute any adverse events to the correct product”, said Michael Reilly, executive director of ASBM.

 

To accomplish this, the FDA and WHO have each proposed a system which appends a distinct four-letter suffix to a root name shared by the innovator medicine and all biosimilars to that product. While similar, the FDA and WHO systems employ different sets of rules, including which letters may be used and how many unique letters must be used in a suffix. Both systems exclude suffixes that exhibit meaning (e.g. those that are too similar to company names, stock symbols, or words).

 

ASBM’s SuffixAudit checks a proposed suffix against regularly-updated lists of words, stock symbols, medical and pharmaceutical terms, and combinations not in compliance with FDA or WHO rules. It can also encode suffixes with a 32-bit “checksum”, an additional mathematical safeguard against inadvertent substitution that is required by the WHO Biological Qualifier (BQ) system.

SuffixAudit allows a manufacturer or regulator to quickly test a potential suffix against the FDA established naming rules for biologics, the WHO’s proposed BQ standard, or both, as regulators continue their work to harmonize naming globally”, said Jeff Jones, PhD; an ASBM Advisory Board member and chief architect of the tool.

 

ASBM has worked closely with the WHO since 2013 in the development and implementation of the BQ system, including providing survey data which shows broad support for distinct naming among physicians worldwide. In April 2017, ASBM presented the WHO with a precursor to SuffixAudit called “SuffixDB” which empirically demonstrated the feasibility of implementing the four-letter suffix system by generating many thousands of BQ-compliant suffixes and reliably detecting any potential conflicts or rule violations.

 

“SuffixAudit represents the next generation in biologic naming compliance and will help to streamline the implementation of this approach in any region wishing to pursue distinguishable names. Manufacturers and regulators will be able to name biologics and biosimilars with confidence, ensuring clear product identification regardless of which of the two suffix systems is ultimately adopted as the global standard. ASBM looks forward to meeting with regulators in coming months to offer SuffixAudit as an aid to implementation of distinct naming and to international harmonization” said Mr. Reilly.

 

About the Alliance for Safe Biologic Medicines

 

The Alliance for Safe Biologic Medicines (ASBM) is an organization composed of diverse healthcare groups including physicians, patients, pharmacists, manufactures of innovator biologics and biosimilars, researchers, and others who are working together to ensure patient safety is at the forefront of the biosimilars policy discussion. Visit us at www.SafeBiologics.org.

 

-30-

 

 

For more information, please contact:

 

Michael Reilly

Executive Director

Alliance for Safe Biologic Medicines

Phone: 202-222-8326

Email: Michael@safebiologics.org

 


New Leadership Means New Opportunities for Better Policy

November 15, 2017

By Michael Reilly
Executive Director, ASBM

Prior to serving as ASBM’s Executive Director, I worked from 2002-2008 at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), including three years as Associate Deputy Secretary under Alex M. Azar, who was nominated recently as HHS Secretary. As a former health regulator, I understand the challenges we face when trying to make health policy. Generally speaking, it is important to seek the input of many stakeholders and use this input to guide your approach. When regulators fail to do this effectively, it can result in a failure both of policy and of leadership.

Earlier this month, the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) issued its 2018 Physician Fee Schedule, which governs how the agency reimburses physicians for their services. In a major reversal of policy beginning January 1, 2018, CMS will no longer permit multiple biosimilar products to share a billing code. The original policy was finalized in 2015 over near-unanimous opposition from a diverse group of stakeholders including patient groups, physician and pharmacist organizations, and both innovator biologic and biosimilar manufacturers. ASBM was among the policy’s vocal opponents, and joined with them in citing safety and pharmacovigilance concerns as well as the possibility of discouraging further biosimilar development and higher prices overall.

CMS acknowledged this in its Final Rule:

“Most of these [more than 75] commenters stated that the CMS proposal will create access issues…Other concerns included a belief that as a result of the proposal, prescribers’ choices will be limited, that tracking or pharmacovigilance activities will be impaired, and that innovation and product development will be harmed, leading to increased costs for biosimilar products.”1

With the new Administration, however came new leadership, new ideas and a new willingness to revisit a contentious issue. In a victory for patients, incoming CMS Administrator Seema Verma reversed the previous Administration’s policy, replacing it with one that better reflects the concerns of those whom it most affects.

New leadership creates opportunities for positive change. For this reason, in advance of the World Health Organization’s 65th Consultation on International Nonproprietary Names (INNs) last month, ASBM wrote a letter to incoming WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus urging him to act on biologic naming.

In 2014, after years of consultation with national regulatory authorities worldwide, the WHO’s INN Expert Group recommended the WHO make available a voluntary global standard for the naming of biologics and biosimilars to that product. This took the form of the “Biologic Qualifier” (BQ)- a four-letter suffix tied to the manufacturer or marketing authorization holder, appended to a root name shared by the originator product and all biosimilars to that product.

The advantages of the BQ are many; clear product identification, reducing inadvertent substitution, ensuring accurate attribution of adverse events, improved pharmacovigilance, and increased manufacturer accountability are but a few.  In 2015, the FDA adopted a BQ-compatible naming system, and Health Canada and Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) have indicated their support for the WHO’s plan.

Yet to date, the INN Expert Group’s recommendation has not been implemented, and regulators worldwide await the WHO’s leadership on biologic naming.

I met with the Australian TGA in February and Health Canada in October to share survey results of biologic prescribers in those countries, and they remain supportive of the WHO, if frustrated by the delay in implementation.

Around the world, ASBM has found broad support for distinct naming among physicians. 68% of Canadian physicians support distinct naming, as do 76% of their Australian counterparts. In the U.S., 66% of physicians and 68% of pharmacists support it.

In Latin America, where pharmacovigilance systems are often less robust than in the wealthiest countries, an astonishing 94% of physicians surveyed support the BQ as a useful tool for ensuring their patients receive the correct medicine.

The BQ is a well-considered and practicable solution to the global problem of biologic naming. The WHO has the world’s confidence and is unquestionably the best situated to facilitate global harmonization. Yet regulators recognize the need for action is immediate, and in frustration, are looking elsewhere. The TGA recently solicited input on whether they should harmonize instead with the U.S., or create their own distinct naming system. So today we are witnessing the beginning of the fragmentation the BQ was created precisely to avoid.  Further delay in BQ implementation risks undermining harmonization efforts and additional proliferation of country-specific naming schemes.

As in the CMS example, new leadership brings with it the chance to revisit and correct the errors of the past, to listen to stakeholders, and to get health policy right for those it affects most.

It remains our hope that under Dr. Tedros’ leadership, the WHO will act soon to extend the many protections of distinct naming to patients worldwide.

1 80 Fed. Reg. 71093 (November 16, 2015)

 


ASBM Supports WHO Naming Plan in Comments to Australia’s TGA

September 12, 2017

On July 28th, 2017 the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) announced that it was seeking comments from interested parties on the nomenclature for biologic medicines, including biosimilars. In a comment letter dated September 7th, ASBM responded, advocating for distinct naming of all biologics and biosimilars, and urging the TGA to adopt the World Health Organization’s Biological Qualifier (BQ) proposal. The BQ would assign a distinguishing suffix to biologics and biosimilars in order to aid in accurate identification and tracking.

From the comment letter:

The WHO INN Committee has been discussing approaches for global naming harmonization for several years, and ASBM has been engaged with this group since 2013. ASBM believes the WHO proposal to assign Biological Qualifier (BQ) suffixes —an alphabetic suffix assigned at random to a biological active substance manufactured at a specified site— is an easy-to-use model that can become a global standard, allowing for clear product identification, facilitating manufacturer accountability, and protecting patient safety. We were surprised that TGA did not list the adoption of the BQ for consideration as a potential naming option for biologic medicines. We encourage TGA to consider this as a naming option that will meet each of the outcomes sought, with the added benefit of enabling global naming harmonization.

ASBM met with the TGA and its parent agency the Australian Department of Health in February 2017 to share results of our survey of 160 Australian prescribers of biologic medicines. 76% of survey respondents supported TGA issuing distinct names for all biologics, including biosimilars.

Read the full comment letter here.