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BioWorld - Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Home » Topics » Drugs

Drugs
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Biosimilar drugs

Future of US biologics competition could rest in PBMs’ hands

March 14, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
2023 may be a pivotal year for biosimilars in the U.S. with a number of approved Humira (adalimumab) biosimilars set for staggered launches under agreements with Abbvie Inc. How successful those launches are, including the launch of Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH’s interchangeable, Cyltezo, and potential other interchangeables, will be determined in large part by three pharmacy benefit managers that together control the prescription drug formularies for nearly 80% of Americans covered by Medicare and private insurance.
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Rx price increases intensify US scrutiny of industry practices

March 3, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
There’s nothing like beginning-of-the-year price increases to turn up the heat on the prescription drug pricing debate in the U.S. This year is no exception.  Citing a mean price increase of 5.1% on brand drugs in the first 25 days of 2022, 13 Democratic lawmakers, led by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), wrote this week to Steven Ubl, president and CEO of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, demanding an explanation for those hikes.
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FDA approved icons and medical professional

PERSIST-ence pays off as the FDA approves CTI’s cancer treatment

March 1, 2022
By Lee Landenberger
After years of turbulent development that included a clinical hold, a COVID-19 stumble, a withdrawn approval application and an extended PDUFA date, the FDA has approved CTI Biopharma Corp.’s Vonjo (pacritinib) for treating the bone marrow cancer myelofibrosis.
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J&J’s $5B opioid settlement is on

Feb. 28, 2022
Johnson & Johnson (J&J) and its U.S.-based Janssen Pharmaceutical Cos. reported that they have a sufficient level of participation to move forward with a $5 billion nationwide settlement to resolve opioid-related claims and litigation by states, cities, counties and other government subdivisions in the U.S.
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HHS: More work to do as global drug, device supply chains recover

Feb. 28, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
The U.S. is making strides in addressing the drug and device supply chain vulnerabilities revealed by the COVID-19 pandemic, but there’s still a lot of work to do to reduce dependance on sole source suppliers and foreign manufacturing, according to a new Health and Human Services (HHS) report.
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China and U.S. flags

USTR: China falling short of WTO’s market-oriented principles

Feb. 22, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
Over the past few years, China has been quick to make promises to improve its regulatory and patent schemes for biopharmaceuticals and medical devices in keeping with its World Trade Organization (WTO) commitments, but it’s been slow to fulfill those promises – at least in the eyes of the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR).
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US flag, Department of Health and Human Services flags

Court: US HHS violation letters violative

Feb. 17, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
Drug companies won another round in their battle with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) over how many contract pharmacies must be given the steep discounts dictated under the 340B drug pricing program aimed at helping public clinics and hospitals provide charity care.
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China and U.S. flags

USTR: China falling short of WTO’s market-oriented principles

Feb. 16, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
Over the past few years, China has been quick to make promises to improve its regulatory and patent schemes for biopharmaceuticals and medical devices in keeping with its World Trade Organization (WTO) commitments, but it’s been slow to fulfill those promises – at least in the eyes of the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR).
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Architectural pillars

US Fed Circuit repeats wakeup call on generic carveouts

Feb. 15, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
The U.S. Federal Circuit’s denial Feb. 11 of an en banc rehearing in a case that could undermine label carveouts and slow the launch of generics is the topic of hallway chatter at this week’s annual conference of the Association for Accessible Medicines.
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Prescription drug bottle, pills shaped in $ sign

More US-approved biologics translates to higher Rx drug spend

Feb. 14, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
Even as the U.S. Congress continues to kick the can down the road on prescription drug pricing, pressure to finally confront the issue is increasing. But as lawmakers debate price controls via direct Medicare negotiations vs. innovation, along with inflationary caps on price increases, one factor often gets downplayed: the role biologics are playing in the country’s overall spend on prescription drugs. While generics account for 90% of the drugs prescribed in the U.S., the other 10% of drugs prescribed account for more than 80% of the annual spending, according to the Association for Accessible Medicines.
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