More on the Dynamics of the Biosimilar Marketplace

In this post, we summarize market share and average sales price (ASP) trends for several notable biologic categories with biosimilar competition, courtesy of the Q2 2026 Samsung Bioepis Market Trend Report.

Over the years, we’ve observed the effect of biosimilar competition on biologic pricing, generally in the form of ASP and wholesale average cost (WAC) declines. Even when biosimilar competition was less than robust, prices declined steadily for some drug categories, shockingly fast for others. But the savings keep accumulating.

Biosimilar market share

The Pegfilgrastim ASP Roller Coaster

The pegfilgrastim category has been fascinating since its first biosimilar was launched in late 2018. The ASP declines, plateaus, rises, and falls once again have been chronicled in this column in the past. Perhaps the main take away of the biosimilar ASP chart featured in the latest Samsung Bioepis Market Trend Report is that the graphic jumble of ASP movements have finally coalesced into a narrower range, between $1,813 at the top end for Stimufend and $839 at the bottom end for Fulphila; the latter is also the market leader with 41% share (as of Q4 2025).

The wild ASP rollercoaster of chart lines has taken three years and some stops and starts by manufacturers like Sandoz before reaching this station. Market share in this category is dominated by biosimilars, with Neulasta accounting for only 13% of volume; however, Onpro is not included in IQVIA’s data, so it is far from the whole story.

Biosimilars Leading the Autoimmune Field

On the autoimmune side, biosimilars have just reached a majority share of the infliximab market, with 51%, but the reference product (branded and unbranded Remicade) still has the greatest volume (49% vs. 30% for Inflectra). Here also, the ASPs of the various products have settled into a narrow range ($237-$293).

Biosimilar market share

Based on the IQVIA data, the latest Samsung Bioepis report concedes that Humira’s prescription volume has been eclipsed by the mass of adalimumab biosimilars currently on the market. The authors peg Humira’s market share at 40%, and this is probably generous, because IQVIA does not track Cordavis private-label volume. The individual biosimilar shares are closely grouped, with Hyrimoz at 13% down to Amjevita at 4% (Nuvaila’s private-label version adds another 5%), and at least four others combining for 7% in total.

The tocilizumab market, which is about 2 years old, is showing slow gains for its three biosimilars, which comprise 18% of total prescription volume. It is led by Tyenne (16%), which also has the lowest published ASP, at $1,607, a 23% discount to the reference product’s ASP.

For ustekinumab, Stelara’s market share had already been knocked down to approximately 70%, as of Q4 2025, a far faster trajectory than that seen with adalimumab. Yesintek, at 11%, holds a narrow lead over Wezlana (7%). As we have seen at their introductions, the WAC pricing discounts have been extremely steep, led by Starjemza (–98%, or $500 total). But this is the first quarter for published biosimilar ASPs in the category, which come into play because ustekinumab requires an infusible loading dose for some indications, which is given by a health care provider under Medicare Part B. The loading dose ASPs have a wide initial range, from $286 for Steqeyma, to $1,643 for Pyzchiva. The average ASP of the biosimilars is $753, compared with $1,426 for Stelara.

A Failed Biosimilar Ophthalmology Category, or not Really?

Overall, the report details a generally, very positive biosimilar story. The one drug category where this is not the case, is ranibizumab. With the pause in commercialization of Cimerli, the low uptake of Byooviz, and the dominance of aflibercept and bevacizumab in the injectable retinal care product, marketshare of the reference product Lucentis has returned to 98%. Despite the lack of biosimilar success, the ASPs for the category hover between $320 and $398, a 72% drop cited by the report’s authors. Unfortunately, IQVIA data does not yet include the effect of the launch of the first biosimilar on the aflibercept market. We’re betting on another big success story here.

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