1st Annual Biosimilars Forum (2016)

The 1st Annual Biosimilars Forum was hosted in Budapest, on October, 2016 by Accelsiors Ltd., clinicians, statisticians and regulatory representatives gathered together from around the world to share with each other their perspectives on this hot topic of research in lectures and informal discussions.

Please watch this short video with the key lecturers and the organizers of the forum summarizing their thoughts about the topic and sharing their experiences of this two days forum as an insight into the spirit of active brainstorming during the event.


We had a successful and professionally fruitful event together in 2016.
Learn more about the programme of the 1st Annual Biosimilars Forum!


GALLERY

Video Interviews

Please watch these short video interviews with the key lecturers of the 1st Annual Biosimolars Forum:

Account of experiences about the 1st Annual Biosimilars Forum

The very successful 1st Annual Biosimilars Forum was hosted in Budapest on October of the last year by Acclesiors CRO with participation of international scientific experts such as Shein-Chung Chow (Professor of Duke University School of Medicine), Prof Dr. László Endrényi (Professor Emeritus of University of Toronto), and clinicians, statisticians and regulatory representatives gathered together from around the world to share with each other their perspectives on this hot topic of research in lectures and informal discussions.

Shein-Chung Chow (Professor, Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Duke University School of Medicine; Special Government Employee and statistical consultant of the US FDA; Editor-in-Chief of three journals including the Journal of Biopharmaceutical Statistics, Drug Designing, and the Journal of Biosimilars), invited guest lecturer gave a thorough overview of the topic on the first day, touching the design and analysis of biosimilar studies, providing an overview of current FDA regulatory requirements for assessing biosimilarity of biosimilar products and giving a detailed description of the fundamental differences and assumptions between the chemical generic products and follow-on biologics. ”I think the development of biosimilars is heading for a great future” – he pointed out, illustrated by the increase in spending and sales in the industry and giving some insight into the history and current situation of submissions in the field. Johanna Mielke (Biostatistician, Novartis Pharma AG) provided a bigger picture through a systematic review of authorised biosimilars in the European Union. ”Biosimilars are essentially cheaper than the original drugs” – said Prof. Dr. László Endrényi (Professor Emeritus, University of Toronto; Former President of Canadian Society for Pharmaceutical Scientists), key lecturer of the event, thus it is not only a business opportunity for developers to put them on the market, they also foster having sustainable health care systems and are ultimately of the interest of patients.

However, as biosimilars emerge as a rapidly growing segment, there are challenges to overcome and questions to answer. Challenges begin with manufacturing: as compared to small-molecule generic products, in the case of biosimilars ”it is much more difficult to imitate the original product” – continues Prof. Dr. László Endrényi, which in fact has an effect on sale prices: ”Whereas a generic product can be 50-70% cheaper than the brand name drug, in the case of biosimilars the difference would be perhaps 20-30%. But that is still a lot, because biological drugs are very-very expensive”. The speciality of manufacturing biosimilars is also reflected in the fact that „right now there is a major concern that the EU and US licenced reference products are not really similar in some cases”, adds Shein-Chung Chow, which can undermine intentions to prove biosimilarity of a drug simultaneously to both references.

This latter issue raises the question of harmonization between regulatory requirements of the EMA, FDA and beyond, however it appears that there is room to improve on currently existing non-global legislation as well. Commenting on the currently existing EMA guidelines, Ildikó Aradi, Head of Clinical Development of Biologics at Gedeon Richter Plc. noted that ”the European Agency has a pioneering role in biosimilar development and they are taking some next steps”, as several further guidances are under development, further commenting that „the guidances that we have now are good and they are flexible”. This implies that „there is still some lack in some areas where there could be more guidance”, as Stephan Lehr (Biostatistician, Austrian Medicines and Medical Devices Agency) adds. Prof. Dr. László Endrényi had some concerns regarding the United States legislation and beginned with a comparison: „ The pathways are very-very different in the European Union and the United States. In Europe they go almost product by product and there are some guidelines for each product class. In the United States they try to have a big encompassing legislation which covers everything – and it cannot.” In his lecture, he pointed out that having limited authority, central regulators (EMA and US) do not always take responsibility over issues, such is the case with interchangeability which leads to de-centralised solutions. There was a consensus amongst participants of the event that globally harmonized guidelines would be desirable and events attaining international attention like this are bringing us closer to achieving it.

Stephan Lehr touched in his presentation methodological issues discussed with authorities in the planning stage and gave some insights into assessment from a regulatory point of view. Andrea Laslop (Unit Head, Austrian Medicines and Medical Devices Agency) gave a presentation about the concept of ’totality of evidence’ adjusted for biosimilars, and discussed how to avoid pitfalls in the step-wise approach at the quality, non-clinical and clinical levels to develop evidence of biosimilarity. Establishing biosimilarity on the quality attributes level was further discussed by Martin Wolfsegger (Associate Director, Shire). Vid Stanulovic (Consultant, Clinical Development and Pharmacovigilance) discussed in his presentation which specialties of biosimilars have to be considered when it comes to demonstrating similarity of clinical safety.

The forum provided the opportunity for lecturers to share their own concepts with the audience, including Shein-Chung Chow, who recognised that approaches used for generics are not entirely appropriate in case of biosimilars: he presented his proposed criteria for biosimilarity and a biosimilarity index developed by him and collegues. László Endrényi presented a proposal for a new criterion for interchangeability (SCDI), similar to the scaled average bioequivalence (SABE) approach. Júlia Singer (Chief Scientific Officer, Accelsiors Ltd) went into highlighting that the application of imputation methods has to be aligned with the purpose of a trial and as such specific considerations have to be taken into account in case of biosimilars.

Having a successful and professionally fruitful event, at its end the organizers expressed their intention to continue the series next year, as Júlia Singer concluded on behalf of organizers: ”it fits into our past, presence and future as well”.

PREVIOUS SPEAKERS OF THE ANNUAL BIOSIMILARS FORUM

Shein-Chung CHOW
Professor, Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Duke University School of Medicine

László ENDRÉNYI
Professor Emeritus of Pharmacology and Biostatistics, University of Toronto; Former President of Canadian Society for Pharmaceutical Scientists

Andrea LASLOP

Unit Head,
Austrian Medicines and Medical Devices Agency

Johanna MIELKE

Biostatistician,
Novartis Pharma AG
 

Bernd JILMA
Vice Chair, Department Clinical Pharmacology, Medical University of Vienna

Franz KÖNIG
Associate Professor,
Medical Unversity of Vienna, Section for Medical Statistic

Stephan LEHR
Biostatistician, Austrian Medicines and Medical Devices Agency, President, Viennese Section of IBS

Júlia SINGER
Chief Scientific Officer, Accelsiors CRO Ltd.; President, Hungarian Society for Clinical Biostatistics

Vid STANULOVIC

Consultant,
Clinical Development and Pharmacovigilance

Martin WOLFSEGGER
Director Pharmacometrics & Pre-Clinical Biostatistics, Shire
 

Idikó ARADI
Head of Clinical Development of Biologics, Gedeon Richter Plc.,Vice-Chair, Medicines for Europe – European Biosimilars Group

Péter ARÁNYI
Secretary,
Medical Research Council, Ethics Committee for Clinical Pharmacology

AGENDA OF THE 1ST ANNUAL BIOSIMILARS FORUM (2016)

This two-day series of events consisted of a COURSE DAY (October 6th, 2016) and a professional SYMPOSIUM DAY (invited presentations and round table session, scheduled for October 7th, 2016) regarding hot topics related to the development of biosimilars with strong Statistical Methodologies in Biosimilar Studies.
6th OCTOBER, 2016

1st day: COURSE with special lecturer

13:00 – 14:00 

1st Day Registration

14:00 – 18:00

Design and Analysis of Biosimilar Studies

The course is instructed by: Shein-Chung CHOW, PhD
Professor, Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Duke University School of Medicine, USA
Special Government Employee and statistical consultant of the US FDA;
Editor-in-Chief of the: Journal of Biosimilars; the Journal of Biopharmaceutical Statistics and the Drug Designing,
More than 30 years of experience in pharmaceutical/clinical development
• Author or co-author of over 280 methodology papers and 24 books including Biosimilars: Design and Analysis of Follow-on Biologics
The materials of the course are developed based on
  • the book entitled “Biosimilars: Design and Analysis of Follow-on Biologics” by Chow SC published in 2013 by Chapman and Hall/CRCPress, Taylor & Francis, New York,
  • and the 3rd edition of the book entitled “Design and Analysis of Bioavailability and Bioequivalence Studies” by Chow SC and Liu JP published in 2008 by Chapman and Hall/CRC Press, Taylor & Francis, New York.
Schedule of the course:
14:00 – 15:00   |   Lecture 1: Assessing Biosimilarity: Issues and Recent

Development
• Fundamental differences: Generics versus biosimilars
• Regulatory requirements: EU EMA, US FDA, and WHO
• Definition of biosimilarity: US BPCI Act
• Scientific factors for assessing biosimilarity: Criteria for biosimilarity | Non-inferiority vs. equivalence | Multiple reference products
• Development of biosimilarity index: Unified and robust approach
• Concluding remarks

15:00 – 15:30   |   Coffee break: refreshments & networking
15:30 – 16:30   |   Lecture 2: Assessing Interchangeability

Issues, Designs, and Statistical methods
• Concept of interchangeability: Switching | Alternating
• Current issues: Produce same clinical results in any given patient
• Criteria for interchangeability: Adjust for variability of reference product
• Study designs: Switching designs
• Statistical methods
• Concluding remarks

16:30 – 17:00   |   Coffee break: refreshments & networking
17:00 – 18:00   |   Lecture 3: Analytical Similarity Assessment in Biosimilar Studies

Background
• BPCI’s definition of biosimilarity
• FDA’s guidances on biosimilars
• Recent regulatory submission

Analytical similarity assessment
• Classification of critical quality attributes (CQAs)
• Tiered approach
– Equivalence test for Tier 1 CQAs
– Quality range approach for Tier 2 CQAs
– Raw data and graphical comparison for Tier 3 CQAs

US FDA’s current thinking on Tiered approach

7th OCTOBER, 2016

2nd day: SYMPOSIUM and ROUND TABLE SECTION

9:30 – 10:00 

2nd Day Registration (for those attending only day 2)

10:00 – 10:30

Keynote lecture: Interchangeability of biological drug products

László ENDRÉNYI,
Professor Emeritus of Pharmacology and Biostatistics, University of Toronto;
Former President of Canadian Society for Pharmaceutical Scientists
László TÓTHFALUSI,
Associate Professor,
Faculty of Pharmacology, Semmelweis Medical University, Budapest

10:30 – 10:50

Clinical trials for authorised biosimilars in the European Union: A systematic review

Johanna MIELKE,
Biostatistician,
Novartis Pharma AG

Co-authors:
Bernd JILMA,
Vice Chair,
Department Clinical Pharmacology, Medical University of Vienna
Franz KÖNIG,
Associate Professor,
Medical Unversity of Vienna, Section for Medical Statistics
Byron JONES,
Consultant,
Statistical Methodology and Consulting Group at Novartis Pharma AG in Basel

10:50 – 11:10

Biosimilar development – a statistical assessor’s perspective

Stephan LEHR,
Biostatistician, Austrian Medicines and Medical Devices Agency,
President, Viennese Section of IBS

11:10 – 11:30

Coffee Break

11:30 – 11:50

The regulator’s view on the totality of evidence for biosimilars

Andrea LASLOP,
Unit Head,
Austrian Medicines and Medical Devices Agency

11:50 – 12:10

The intention to treat principle and imputation of missing data in clinical studies for biosimilars

Júlia SINGER,
Chief Scientific Officer, Accelsiors CRO Ltd.;
President, Hungarian Society for Clinical Biostatistics

12:10 – 12:35

Demonstrating similarity of clinical safety

Vid STANULOVIC,
Consultant,
Clinical Development and Pharmacovigilance

12:30 – 12:50

Evaluation of different methods to establish biosimilarity on the quality attributes level

Martin WOLFSEGGER,
Director Pharmacometrics & Pre-Clinical Biostatistics,
Shire

12:50 – 13:45

Lunch Break

13:45 – 15:45

Round table discussion:

Moderator:
Ildikó ARADI ,
Head of Clinical Development of Biologics, Gedeon Richter Plc.,
Vice-Chair, European Generic medicines Association – European Biosimilars Group
Panel members:
Péter ARÁNYI,
Secretary,
Medical Research Council, Ethics Committee for Clinical Pharmacology
Andrea LASLOP,
Unit Head,
Austrian Medicines and Medical Devices Agency
Stephan LEHR,
Biostatistician, Austrian Medicines and Medical Devices Agency,
President, Viennese Section of IBS
Franz KÖNIG,
Associate Professor,
Medical Unversity of Vienna, Section for Medical Statistics
Johanna MIELKE,
Biostatistician,
Novartis Pharma AG
Júlia SINGER,
Chief Scientific Officer, Accelsiors CRO Ltd.;
President, Hungarian Society for Clinical Biostatistics
Vid STANULOVIC,
Consultant,
Clinical Development and Pharmacovigilance
Martin WOLFSEGGER,
Director Pharmacometrics & Pre-Clinical Biostatistics,
Shire
Heike WÖHLING,
Head of Biostatistics,
Sandoz Biopharmaceuticals