Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, MD, undoubtedly understands the threat to a successful biosimilar industry in the US, and his well-reported remarks emphasize some of the key issues. The policies that the FDA Commissioner wants to bring to bear on the multifaceted problem may be harder to implement. In this post, we examine one of those issues.
Yet, it is not practical to eliminate the lot-to-lot variation that has been seen for decades, sometimes incurred by plant changes or subtly different manufacturing techniques. Does this mean that biosimilar makers will have to test their agent against more samples of the originator biologic and in studies with more patients? For the purposes of proving interchangeability, the variation could undermine confidence in the outcome.
According to the FDA Commissioner, “We’re going to be putting out a set of policies to compel the branded drug makers who have biologics on the market to tighten up their manufacturing, to have less variance of their biologics that are currently on the market.” Preventing this variation in biologic manufacturing sounds like a costly (and possible futile) exercise. Let’s say for example, that one plant must be shut down for a time owing to maintenance; how does one prevent the manufacturer of a compound that demonstrates slightly different structural folding produced at another plant? Only an expert in biologic manufacturing techniques can answer this question.
