The World Health Organization (WHO) held its 57th Consultation on International Nonproprietary Names (INNs) for Pharmaceutical Substances on 22 October 2013 in Geneva, Switzerland. During the meeting some stakeholders called for biosimilars to be assigned the same INN as their reference biologicals, while others called for the use of distinct non-propriety names.
The use of a three-letter code or fantasy suffix to distinguish between biosimilars was first proposed at the WHO’s 55th Consultation on INNs and was discussed again at its 56th Consultation [1]. The European Generic medicines Association (EGA) expressed its concern at the meeting that ‘the current robust WHO INN system runs the risk of being dismantled by the discussion around biosimilar medicines’.
Dr Sumant Ramachandra, Senior Vice President and Chief Scientific Officer, Hospira, pointed out that ‘Europe has approved biosimilars with the same non-proprietary names as their reference biologic[al]s for more than six years in a system that has proved effective’. Advocates for unique INN for biosimilars have claimed that if a common non-proprietary name were used, patients would not know which drug they are getting [2]. Dr Ramachandra argues that ‘biosimilars have been successfully tracked in the marketplace using their brand name, meaning a separate non-proprietary name isn’t necessary for keeping track of biosimilars once they’re on the market’.
EGA points out that ‘biosimilar medicines have been used safely since 2006, and pharmacovigilance data shows that current tracking and adverse event reporting systems work well. European Union legislation requires biologicals to be identified through the recording of brand name and batch number [3].
The Generic Pharmaceutical Association (GPhA), which represents the generics industry in the US, has filed a Citizen Petition with FDA recommending that ‘all biosimilars approved by the agency share the same international nonproprietary name as the biologic[al] products to which they refer’. GPhA joined EGA in stressing that ‘the established INN naming system has worked effectively and should be continued’. GPhA recommended that ‘all biosimilars share the same INN as the biologic[al] products to which they refer, because by definition they are ‘highly similar’ to the reference biologic[al]s and have no clinically meaningful differences that require a unique name’.
Advocates for a common INN for biosimilars are concerned that there could be the possibility of overdosing or misdosing if different names were used, as a patient could inadvertently be prescribed two versions of the same biosimilar [2].
The Alliance for Safe Biologic Medicines (ASBM), which represents healthcare, patient and physician groups, as well as originator biological companies, called for the use of distinct non-propriety names for biological medicines at the WHO meeting in October 2013. They argued that this would make it clear which medicine a patient received and ensure that adverse events can be accurately traced back to the correct product.
But the discussion does not end with the WHO meeting, a bipartisan group of senators in the US has also sent a letter to FDA expressing their concerns on the issue of naming of biosimilars. The group states that ‘if biosimilars are unable to share the same active ingredient name as the brand originator product, we believe the Congressional intent behind the BPCIA [Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act] would be undermined as would the safety and accessibility of affordable biosimilars’. The letter was prompted after FDA removed its 2006 statement on naming of biologicals/biosimilars from its website.
Editor’s comment
How do you think biosimilars should be named? Please feel free to share your thoughts via email or in the comments section below. What is your opinion on the issue of INN for biosimilars? Should biosimilars have unique INNs or should they share the same INN as their reference biologicals? How will safety be affected by any decision over naming of biosimilars?
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Source: www.gabionline.net
Source URL: https://gabi-journal.net/news/calls-for-biosimilars-to-have-same-inn-at-who-meeting
No matter what FDA does, with it by law and many decades of precedents/history stuck with the INN/USAN naming regime (for all pharmaceuticals), no matter what biosimilar naming regime will be adopted in the U.S., there will still be many problems with the names. The parent INN/USAN system is simply not suited, never designed, to handle biopharmaceuticals, much less more nuanced biosimilars. The adopted biosimilar names will almost certainly be neither sufficiently unique/distinct nor (bio)similar/(bio)generic for many uses and users. For further information about biosimilar/biopharmaceutical nomenclature, including a somewhat related (concerning all biopharmaceutical nomenclature) Citizen Petition I’ve filed with FDA.
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