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DATA COMPILATION #PharmaFlow

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DMF filings hit all-time high in Q3 2024; China tops list with 58% increase in Type II submissions
Drug Master Files, or DMFs, are confidential documents that play a crucial role in the pharmaceutical industry. These files, submitted to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), contain detailed information about ingredients, manufacturing processes, and packaging of medicines. They help the FDA oversee drug quality. Of the four types, Type II DMFs involve active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) for both branded and generic drugs. The third quarter (Q3) of 2024 saw Type II DMF submissions set a new record. A total of 309 Type II DMFs were submitted to the FDA during this period, a substantial 24.6 percent increase over Q3 2023 (with 248 submissions). The second quarter of 2024 too saw a remarkable increase, with 237 Type II DMFs being submitted compared to 178 in Q2 2023. View FDA DMF Filings in Q3 2024 (Power BI Dashboard, Free Excel Available) China witnesses steep rise in DMF submissions, beats India with maximum filings In Q3 2024, China filed 153 DMFs submissions, marking a substantial 57.7 percent increase from the 97 submissions filed in Q3 2023. India maintained its strong position but fell to the number two spot with 110 DMFs, representing a modest 3.8 percent increase from 106 in Q3 2023. The US, which came a distant third, saw a slight decline in DMF submissions, with 13 filed in Q3 2024, as compared to 18 in Q3 2023. For several years, India had a lead in Type II DMFs. Since 2020, which marked the start of the pandemic, we have noticed a gradual increase in DMFs filed by China. This year, China has surpassed India considerably in the first three quarters. During the first nine months of 2024, China submitted 372, while India filed 286 DMFs. If this lead is maintained in Q4, DMFs from China will surpass that of India in 2024.  Amongst European countries, Spain led with seven DMFs, followed by Italy at four, and Germany and the Netherlands at three each. Among other nations, Japan contributed six while Israel submitted four DMFs. In company-wise tally, China’s Jiangsu East-Mab Biomedical Technology topped the list with an impressive 14 DMFs. On its heels were Indian companies — MSN at 13 DMFs, and Vamsi Labs and Hetero Drugs at nine DMFs each. China’s Porton Pharma and Wuxi AppTec filed five, while Shanghai Keze Yongxin Biotechnology, and Qingdao Glycogene Pharmaceutical contributed four submissions each. India's Maithri Drugs also submitted four. Japanese company Santeja filed five. Overall, Asia accounted for nearly 90 percent, with China contributing a dominant 49.5 percent of all DMF submissions. India was at 35.6 percent, the US at 4.2 percent, while Europe contributed 6.5 percent.  View FDA DMF Filings in Q3 2024 (Power BI Dashboard, Free Excel Available) Diabetes, obesity, cancer, women’s health drugs emerge as hot molecules in Q3 2024 In terms of molecules, semaglutide (used for the treatment of type 2 diabetes and weight management) and relugolix (to treat prostate cancer and uterine fibroids) saw six DMF filings each in Q3 2024, indicating significant industry interest in these compounds. Following closely behind were semaglutide’s competitor tirzepatide and overactive bladder therapy vibegron, garnering four DMFs each. Finerenone (a non-steroidal drug for chronic kidney disease associated with type 2 diabetes) and voclosporin (an immunosuppressant for lupus nephritis) saw three DMFs each.  The last quarter also witnessed the introduction of 14 molecules with first-time DMFs. Among them were acetoxy empagliflozin, cabozantinib fumarate, tivozanib hydrochloride monohydrate, diosmetin, trilaciclib, clenbuterol hydrochloride, fenoterol hydrobromide, tapinarof and fezolinetant. Fezolinetant, with a DMF from Spain’s Moehs Iberica, is the active ingredient in Astellas’ Veozah, which is the first non-hormonal treatment for menopausal symptoms approved by the FDA. Tapinarof, filed by India’s Maithri Drugs, is used in Vtama, a novel steroid-free psoriasis cream. Other compounds that made their DMF debut include berotralstat, calcium phosphoryl choline chloride, phloroglucinol dihydrate, belumosudil mesylate and trimethylphloroglucinol. During Q2 2024, there were 19 drugs that saw DMF submissions for the first time, including molecules like triptorelin, sorafenib, pralsetinib, trilaciclib dihydrochloride, resmetirom (hepatology) and teneligliptin hydrochloride hydrate (metabolic disorders).  View FDA DMF Filings in Q3 2024 (Power BI Dashboard, Free Excel Available)    GDUFA fee for FY 2025: The FDA’s Generic Drug User Fee Amendments (GDUFA) is a law designed to speed access to safe and effective generic drugs to the public and reduce costs to the industry. The fiscal year 2025 fee rates were published on July 31, 2024. The FDA has revised fees under GDUFA III for all categories. While there is a slight increase in the DMF fee from US$ 94,682 in 2024 to US$ 95,084 in 2025, the ANDA fee has witnessed a significant jump — from US$ 252,453 in 2024 to US$ 321,920 in 2025. FY 2024 and FY 2025 User Fee Rates Generic drug fee category Fees rates for FY 2024 Fees rates for FY 2025 Applications: Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) US$ 2,52,453   US$ 3,21,920   Drug Master File (DMF) US$ 94,682 US$ 95,084 Facilities: Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient (API)—Domestic US$ 40,464 US$ 41,580 API—Foreign US$ 55,464 US$ 56,580 Finished Dosage Form (FDF)—Domestic US$ 2,20,427   US$ 2,31,952 FDF—Foreign US$ 2,35,427   US$ 2,46,952 Contract Manufacturing Organization (CMO)—Domestic US$ 52,902 US$ 55,668 CMO—Foreign US$ 67,902 US$ 70,668 GDUFA Program: Large size operation generic drug applicant US$ 17,29,629   US$ 18,91,664 Medium size operation generic drug applicant US$ 6,91,852   US$ 7,56,666 Small business generic drug applicant US$ 1,72,963   US$ 1,89,166 Our view The highlight of the last few quarters has been the sharp rise in Type II DMF filings from China. The submission of a DMF is not required by law or any FDA regulation. FDA’s DMF guideline offers guidance on acceptable approaches to meeting regulatory requirements. Moreover, DMFs establish trust in APIs from lesser-known companies. With a growing emphasis on compliance and quality assurance, it appears that Chinese drug companies are eager to demonstrate their commitment to high standards and build trust in the US market. And that’s good news for the pharmaceutical industry.   

Impressions: 10759

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-blog/dmf-filings-hit-all-time-high-in-q3-2024-china-tops-list-with-58-increase-in-type-ii-submissions

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
24 Oct 2024

WEEKLY NEWS RECAP #Phispers

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Semaglutide proves effective against obesity; Novartis’ Sandoz buys three antibiotics from GSK
This week, Phispers has news on antibiotics and cancer therapies. While Novartis’ Sandoz unit said it is buying three antibiotics from GSK for US$ 500 million, Bristol Myers announced a collaboration worth US$ 1.3 billion with Molecular Templates for its next generation engineered toxin body cancer platform. After bagging FDA approval for liso-cel, Bristol Myers said it is abandoning a second CAR-T therapy, orva-cel. Novo Nordisk’s diabetes drug semaglutide has shown effectiveness in treating obesity in a clinical trial involving 2,000 participants at 129 centers in 16 countries. Israel witnessed a 94 percent drop in symptomatic Covid cases among 600,000 people who were given two doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. The Gilead-Galapagos partnership received yet another setback as Gilead abandoned another drug (ziritaxestat) it was developing under the deal after poor outcomes in a phase 3 trial. Fresenius Kabi has agreed to pay US$ 50 million for data integrity violations at its Indian operations; and Bristol-Myers and Sanofi were ordered to pay Hawaii US$ 834 million over the warning label for its blood thinner Plavix. Novartis’ Sandoz buys three antibiotics from GSK for US$ 500 million Novartis’ generic unit, Sandoz, is buying three of British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline’s cephalosporin antibiotics for US$ 350 million upfront and an additional US$ 150 million in downstream milestone-linked payments. The deal is expected to close later this year, and excludes rights previously sold by GSK (in the US, Australia and Germany). GSK will also retain rights to the three antibiotics in India, Pakistan, Egypt, Japan, and China. The three antibiotics — Zinnat, Zinacef and Fortum — posted US$ 140 million in sales in 2020, in the markets Novartis is picking up. Over the last few years, several major drugmakers have exited the antibiotics space, which has been hit by antibiotic resistant “super bugs” and scarce innovation. Novartis too had left that space in 2018, but is still hanging on to generic antibiotics, and even adding to that portfolio. Cephalosporins is one of the two key antibiotic modalities alongside penicillin and adding the former to its portfolio is bound to increase revenues for Novartis. The Swiss drugmaker plans to leverage its existing production site in Kundl, Austria, to manufacture Zinnat. GSK to shut UK unit post 2025: GSK has said it plans to shut down antibiotics production in the UK, after it transfers assets to Sandoz by 2025. Its deal with Sandoz lasts through 2025. Zinnat is made at GSK’s UK sites in Ulverston in Cumbria and Barnard Castle in County Durham. Ulverston will shut down completely but Barnard Castle will continue to manufacture other GSK products. In all, 300 employees will lose their jobs — 130 in Ulverston and 170 in Barnard Castle. Zinacef and Fortum are made by ACS Dobfar in Verona, Italy. However, GSK isn’t abandoning antibiotics. The company plans to hold on to augmentin as well as gepotidacin. Overall, GSK is backing away from older antibiotics as it increases its focus on vaccines and specialty drugs, including “innovative antibiotics,” the company said. Fresenius Kabi pays US$ 50 million for data integrity violations at Indian operations Indian drugmaker Fresenius Kabi Oncology Limited (FKOL) has agreed to pay US$ 50 million in fines and forfeiture and plead guilty to concealing and destroying records prior to a US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) inspection of its plant in 2013, the US Department of Justice (DOJ) said. FKOL was charged with violating the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act by failing to provide certain records to FDA investigators. According to a press statement, FKOL has also agreed to implement a compliance and ethics program designed to prevent, detect, and correct violations of US laws relating to FKOL’s manufacture of cancer drugs intended for terminally ill patients.  According to court documents, FKOL owned and operated a manufacturing plant in Kalyani, West Bengal, that manufactured active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) used in various cancer drug products distributed in the United States. The US government alleges that prior to a January 2013 FDA inspection of the Kalyani facility, the FKOL plant management directed employees to remove certain records from the premises and delete other records from computers that would have revealed FKOL was manufacturing drug ingredients in contravention to FDA requirements. The offenses are federal misdemeanors. Bristol Myers inks pact with Molecular Templates, abandons CAR-T therapy orva-cel Earlier this month, Bristol Myers Squibb finally bagged US Food and Drug Administration’s approval for its new CAR-T therapy Breyanzi (lisocabtagene maraleucel, or liso-cel) for adults with relapsed or refractory large B-cell lymphoma. Post the much sought after approval, Bristol Myers has rejigged its drug pipeline. While it announced a tie-up for a next-generation engineered toxin body (ETB) cancer platform with Texas-based Molecular Templates for US$ 1.3 billion, it also decided to abandon a second CAR-T therapy — orva-cel. Interestingly, the ETB deal involves an upfront payment of only US$ 70 million. The remaining US$ 1.23 billion will be paid on the achievement of milestones. Under the pact, Molecular Templates will conduct research activities for the discovery of next-generation ETBs for multiple targets, of which the first target has already been selected by BMS, although it has not been made public. Bristol Myers is abandoning a second CAR-T therapy, orva-cel (orvacabtagene autoleucel), and taking a US$ 470 million write-off. Like liso-cel, orva-cel was originally developed by Juno Therapeutics, which was acquired by Celgene for US$ 9 billion. Later, Celgene got acquired by Bristol Myers for US$ 74 billion. Deal in trouble: After handing back filgotinib to Galapagos, Gilead abandons ziritaxestat Over the last few years, Gilead has put in a lot of money into its deal with Galapagos. However, the US$ 5 billion Gilead-Galapagos research partnership has turned out to be disastrous. In December, Gilead had said it will not pursue US approval of filgotinib in rheumatoid arthritis. The two drugmakers had been co-developing filgotinib since 2015. But in August, FDA rejected filgotinib due to concerns regarding the safety of its high dose. Gilead also decided to pay Galapagos US$ 193 million (€160 million) to take over most ongoing clinical trials and return responsibility for the drug in Europe. Last week, Gilead abandoned another drug (ziritaxestat) it was developing under the deal. An independent body checked phase 3 data for the experimental drug in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). The outcome was not good. Following a regular review of unblinded data, an independent monitoring board concluded that “ziritaxestat’s benefit-risk profile no longer supported continuing these studies.” Gilead said the phase 3 program is to be canned. And a phase 2 trial of the drug in systemic sclerosis “will be discontinued.”  Gilead had in-licensed ex-European rights to ziritaxestat back in July 2019 and was also sharing the phase 3 costs. The failure of ziritaxestat is another nail in the coffin for the partnership. Gilead has, in the meantime, placed its bets on Immunomedics, a cancer biotech it bought last year for US$ 21 billion. Novo’s diabetes drug semaglutide shows effectiveness against obesity Obesity is a global health challenge with only a few pharmacologic options. However, it seems we may finally have a cure for obesity other than surgery, dieting and exercise. In a clinical trial, participants taking Novo Nordisk’s diabetes drug semaglutide lost 15 percent of their body weight, on average. During the trial, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, researchers at Northwestern University in Chicago tested semaglutide at a much higher dose as an anti-obesity medication. Nearly 2,000 participants, at 129 centers in 16 countries, injected themselves weekly with semaglutide or a placebo for 68 weeks. Those who got the drug lost close to 15 percent of their body weight, on average, compared with 2.4 percent among those receiving the placebo. More than a third of the participants receiving the drug lost more than 20 percent of their weight. Symptoms of diabetes and pre-diabetes improved in many patients. Those results mark a “game-changer” in an obesity field that, to this point, has not seen results as effective as these, study leader Robert Kushner told The New York Times. The findings of this study will help Novo address two indications — obesity and diabetes — with one drug, since there are no approved obesity medications in the US that also prevent or treat type 2 diabetes. Israel witnesses a 94 percent drop in symptomatic Covid cases with Pfizer’s jab Israel’s largest healthcare provider has reported a 94 percent drop in symptomatic Covid-19 infections among 600,000 people who received two doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. This is the biggest study Israel has undertaken to date. Israel has been conducting a rapid vaccine rollout and its database offers insights into vaccine effectiveness and at what point countries might attain herd immunity. Clalit, a health organization in Israel that covers more than half the population, said the same group was also 92 percent less likely to develop severe illness from the virus. The comparison was against a group of the same size, with matching medical histories, who had not received the vaccine. “It shows unequivocally that Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine is extremely effective in the real world a week after the second dose, just as it was found to be in the clinical study,” said Ran Balicer, Clalit’s chief innovation officer. Balicer said the Pfizer vaccine is even more effective two or more weeks after the second shot. Researchers at the Weizmann Institute of Science, who have been tabulating national data, said a sharp decline in hospitalization and serious illness identified earlier among people aged 60 or more, was being seen for the first time in those aged 55 and older. Bristol-Myers, Sanofi ordered to pay Hawaii US$ 834 million over Plavix warning label  This week, a judge in Hawaii ordered Bristol-Myers Squibb and Sanofi to pay over US$ 834 million to the state for failing to properly warn non-white patients of health risks from its blood thinner Plavix. Bristol-Myers and Sanofi produced Plavix in partnership. The judge, who presided over a four-week, non-jury trial conducted over Zoom, ordered Bristol-Myers and Sanofi to pay US$ 417 million each in penalties. The judge said the companies engaged in unfair and deceptive business practices from 1998 to 2010 by failing to change the drug’s label to warn doctors and patients, despite knowing some of the risks. Hawaii Attorney General Clare Connors, whose office sued the companies in 2014, said the ruling “puts the pharmaceutical industry on notice that it will be held accountable for conduct that deceives the public and places profit above safety.” In a joint statement, Bristol Myers and Sanofi have vowed to appeal the judgement, saying the decision was “unsupported by the law” and “was at odds with the evidence at trial.” They called Plavix safe and effective. Plavix is prescribed to prevent strokes and heart attacks. The blood thinner needs to be activated by the body’s own enzymes, which can vary genetically. Studies have shown that about 14 percent of Chinese patients are unable to metabolize the drug properly, compared with 4 percent of black and 2 percent of white patients. In 2010, the US Food and Drug Administration issued a new Plavix warning label to reflect this information.  

Impressions: 2473

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-phisper/semaglutide-proves-effective-against-obesity-novartis-sandoz-buys-three-antibiotics-from-gsk

#Phispers by PHARMACOMPASS
18 Feb 2021

NEWS #PharmaBuzz

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https://www.pharmabiz.com/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=184549&sid=1

PHARMABIZ
04 Mar 2026

https://www.pharmabiz.com/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=183186&sid=1

PHARMABIZ
23 Dec 2025

https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2025/09/23/3154540/0/en/Microbix-Assisting-EMQN-with-Second-Genetic-Test-EQA-Program.html

GLOBENEWSWIRE
23 Sep 2025

https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/hawaii-700-million-settlement-with-bristol-myers-sanofi-over-plavix-warning-2025-05-10/

REUTERS
12 May 2025

https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/index.cfm?event=overview.process&ApplNo=215388

FDA
20 Sep 2024
Judge orders Sanofi, BMS to pay $916M in Plavix marketing case
Judge orders Sanofi, BMS to pay $916M in Plavix marketing case

23 May 2024

// Kevin Dunleavy FIERCE PHARMA

https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/sanofi-bristol-myers-hook-916m-do-over-plavix-marketing-case-hawaii

Kevin Dunleavy FIERCE PHARMA
23 May 2024