Biosimilar Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Biosimilar stocks.

Biosimilar Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 9 VTRS Viatris Inc. 2024 Q1 - Results - Earnings Call Presentation
May 9 VTRS Viagra maker Viatris misses revenue estimates on weak demand for older drugs
May 9 VTRS Viatris (VTRS) Q1 Earnings and Revenues Miss Estimates
May 9 VTRS Viatris in charts: Net sales drop Y/Y across all markets in Q1
May 9 CHRS Coherus Announces Full Repayment of Pharmakon Advisors $75 Million Term Loan
May 9 VTRS Earnings Summary: Viatris reports mixed Q1 results, reaffirms FY2024 outlook
May 9 VTRS Viatris Non-GAAP EPS of $0.67 in-line, revenue of $3.66B misses by $30M
May 9 VTRS Viatris Reports Strong First Quarter 2024 Financial Results and Reaffirms 2024 Financial Guidance Ranges
May 8 CHRS Coherus BioSciences Q1 2024 Earnings Preview
May 8 VTRS Viatris Q1 Earnings Preview: Focus remains on capital allocation
May 8 VTRS Why Earnings Season Could Be Great for Viatris (VTRS)
May 8 OGN Organon Q1 Earnings: Does The $1 Billion Debt Offering Signal Trouble?
May 8 CHRS When Can We Expect A Profit From Coherus BioSciences, Inc. (NASDAQ:CHRS)?
May 8 CHRS Coherus Announces Clinical Collaboration with the Cancer Research Institute for a Novel Combination Evaluating LOQTORZI® (toripalimab-tpzi) with ENB Therapeutics' ENB-003 for the Treatment of Ovarian Cancer
May 8 OGN Organon announces pricing of $1 billion senior notes offering
May 8 OGN Organon Announces Pricing of $1.0 Billion Senior Notes Offering
May 7 OGN Four Reasons Why Organon Stock Is A Good Buy
May 7 OGN Organon plans to offer $1B in senior notes
May 7 OGN Organon Announces Proposed $1.0 Billion Senior Notes Offering
May 6 VTRS Watch These 5 Drug Stocks for Q1 Earnings: Beat or Miss?
Biosimilar

A biosimilar (also known as follow-on biologic or subsequent entry biologic) is a biologic medical product that is almost an identical copy of an original product that is manufactured by a different company. Biosimilars are officially approved versions of original "innovator" products and can be manufactured when the original product's patent expires. Reference to the innovator product is an integral component of the approval.
Unlike with generic drugs of the more common small-molecule type, biologics generally exhibit high molecular complexity and may be quite sensitive to changes in manufacturing processes. Despite that heterogeneity, all biopharmaceuticals, including biosimilars, must maintain consistent quality and clinical performance throughout their lifecycle. Follow-on manufacturers do not have access to the originator's molecular clone and original cell bank, to the exact fermentation and purification process, or to the active drug substance, but they have access to the commercialized innovator product. Overall, it is harder to ascertain fungibility between generics and innovators among biologics than it is among totally synthesized and semisynthesized drugs. That is why the name "biosimilar" was coined to differentiate them from small-molecule generics. A simple analogy, often used to explain the difference, is to compare wine with soda pop. It is harder to say objectively that two bottles of wine from two wineries are "sufficiently interchangeable," because of differences in yeast strain, weather, and year of grape harvest, than it is to say that two bottles of soda pop of the same flavor coming from two bottling plants are "sufficiently interchangeable" because they contain the same flavoring powder.
Drug-related authorities such as the EU's European Medicines Agency (EMA), the US's Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and the Health Products and Food Branch of Health Canada hold their own guidance on requirements for demonstration of the similar nature of two biological products in terms of safety and efficacy. According to them, analytical studies demonstrate that the biological product is highly similar to the reference product, despite minor differences in clinically inactive components, animal studies (including the assessment of toxicity), and a clinical study or studies (including the assessment of immunogenicity and pharmacokinetics or pharmacodynamics). They are sufficient to demonstrate safety, purity, and potency in one or more appropriate conditions of use for which the reference product is licensed and is intended to be used and for which licensure is sought for the biological product.
In case of a monoclonal antibody-containing medicinal product, such as Remsima, extensive physicochemical and biological characterization for it and its reference product Remicade was conducted to demonstrate their highly-similar properties. Therefore, EMA has granted a marketing authorisation for only a few biosimilars since 2006, including a monoclonal antibody, that was recently approved. Meanwhile, on March 6, 2015, the FDA approved the United States's first biosimilar product, the biosimilar of filgrastim called filgrastim-sndz (trade name Zarxio) by Sandoz.

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