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DATA COMPILATION #PharmaFlow

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DMF filings rise 4.5% in Q3 2025; China holds lead, India records 20% growth in submissions
The third quarter (Q3) of 2025 witnessed a steady rise in Drug Master File (DMF) submissions to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). DMFs are used to provide confidential, detailed information about facilities, processes, or articles used in the manufacturing, processing, packaging, and storing of human drug productsA total of 323 Type II DMFs were submitted during this period, as opposed to 309 submissions in Q3 2024, marking an increase of 4.53 percent. This is the second highest number since 2018. In Q1 2025, 339 Type II filings were recorded.Across all DMF types (II, III, IV, and V), 479 DMFs were filed in Q3 2025, compared to 394 in Q3 2024, representing a 21.57 percent increase. Out of the 323 Type II DMFs submitted in Q3 2025, 40 had completed their review by the end of Q3, reflecting a processing lag between submission and review completion. View FDA DMF Filings in Q3 2025 (Power BI Dashboard, Free Excel Available)China maintains its lead while India posts double-digit growth in DMF submissions China and India continued to dominate DMF submissions in Q3 2025. China retained the top spot with 153 Type II DMFs, matching its submission count from Q3 2024. India recorded 131 DMFs, marking a 20.18 percent increase over 109 filings during the corresponding period last year.The United States stood a distant third with 17 filings, compared to 13 in Q3 2024. Among European nations, Italy recorded eight DMFs, doubling its 2024 tally. The Netherlands filed four, up from three. Spain submitted only one DMF, as against seven submitted in Q3 2024. Taiwan made three filings, up from one submitted in Q3 2024. Together, India, China and Taiwan accounted for about 88.9 percent of all Type II DMFs filed during the quarter. View FDA DMF Filings in Q3 2025 (Power BI Dashboard, Free Excel Available) China’s Suzhou Ryway Biotech tops corporate tally; India’s Hetero, Biophore followChina’s Suzhou Ryway Biotech led the company-wise tally with 12 DMF submissions in Q3 2025. The company had not filed any DMFs in Q3 2024.India’s Hetero Group followed with nine DMFs, maintaining the same number of filings as Q3 2024. Biophore India Pharmaceuticals ranked third with six DMFs, doubling its count from three last year.Other notable contributors include Sai Sreyas Pharmaceuticals (India) and Shanghai Haoyuan Chemexpress (China), with five DMFs each. Companies such as SNJ Group, Lunan Pharmaceutical, Allsino Pharmaceutical, Shankus Pharma, Jiangxi Xinganjiang Pharmaceutical, Sunpure Extracts, Lee Pharma, Umedica Laboratories, Linhai Tianyu Pharmaceutical and Maithri Drugs filed four DMFs each. View FDA DMF Filings in Q3 2025 (Power BI Dashboard, Free Excel Available) Olaparib, semaglutide lead molecular filings; Dr. Reddy’s files DMF for edoxaban & tucatinibDr. Reddy’s Laboratories also featured among key DMF filers in Q3 2025, submitting two DMFs — for edoxaban tosylate monohydrate and tucatinib copovidone. Edoxaban tosylate monohydrate (marketed as Savaysa by Daiichi Sankyo) is a prescription anticoagulant used to reduce the risk of stroke and to treat deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. Patent exclusivity for Savaysa extends until October 2026 in the United States, with no generic currently available.In terms of molecules, the highest number of DMFs were filed for olaparib, semaglutide, ruxolitinib phosphate, ferric carboxymaltose, and vismodegib, with three DMFs each in Q3 2025.Olaparib, sold by AstraZeneca under the brand name Lynparza, saw DMFs being filed by BDR Lifesciences and Intas Pharmaceuticals from India, and by ScinoPharm Taiwan during the quarter.Semaglutide, a glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist developed by Novo Nordisk, continued to draw strong interest from API manufacturers. DMFs for semaglutide were filed by three Chinese companies: Yangzhou Aurisco Pharmaceutical, Zhejiang Peptites Biotech, and Fujian Genohope Biotech.Ruxolitinib phosphate, marketed by Incyte as Jakafi, saw three DMFs. Three Indian companies — Alembic Pharmaceuticals, Valary Labs, and Devi Pharmatech — filed DMFs for this API in Q3 2025. Other molecules that received multiple DMF submissions include ferric carboxymaltose (used to treat iron-deficiency anemia) and vismodegib (an oral therapy for basal-cell carcinoma). View FDA DMF Filings in Q3 2025 (Power BI Dashboard, Free Excel Available) First-time DMF filings span 17 companies; India leads with nine first-time DMFs The quarter saw first-time DMF filings from 17 companies. India took a lead here with nine first-time DMF filings, followed by China (six), and the US (two).The DMF filings in this quarter included inclisiran sodium (filed by Aurisco Pharmaceutical of China), pacritinib citrate (by TAPI Nl B.V. of the Netherlands), and vosoritide (by Apicore LLC of the US).Out of the 19 first-time DMFs filed in Q3 2025, four completed their Generic Drug User Fee Amendments (GDUFA) review process during the quarter. View FDA DMF Filings in Q3 2025 (Power BI Dashboard, Free Excel Available) GDUFA fee for FY 2026: The FDA 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.Fee rates for fiscal year 2026 were published on July 30, 2025. FDA has revised fees under GDUFA III across all categories. While there is a slight increase in the DMF fee from US$ 95,084 in 2025 to US$ 102,584 in 2026, the ANDA fee has seen a sharp rise: from US$ 321,920 in 2025 to US$ 358,247 in 2026.FY 2025 and FY 2026 User Fee Rates Generic drug fee category Fees rates for FY 2025 Fees rates for FY 2026 Applications:     Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) US$ 3,21,920 US$ 3,58,247 Drug Master File (DMF) US$ 95,084 US$ 1,02,584 Facilities:     Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient (API)—Domestic US$ 41,580 US$ 43,549 API—Foreign US$ 56,580 US$ 58,549 Finished Dosage Form (FDF)—Domestic US$ 2,31,952 US$ 2,38,943 FDF—Foreign US$ 2,46,952 US$ 2,53,943 Contract Manufacturing Organization (CMO)—Domestic US$ 55,668 US$ 57,346 CMO—Foreign US$ 70,668 US$ 72,346 GDUFA Program:     Large size operation generic drug applicant US$ 18,91,664 US$ 19,18,377 Medium size operation generic drug applicant US$ 7,56,666 US$ 7,67,351 Small business generic drug applicant US$ 1,89,166 US$ 1,91,838 Our viewFor several years prior to the pandemic, India had a lead in Type II DMF submissions. In recent years, China has surpassed India in DMF filings. But Q3 2025 numbers indicate that Indian drugmakers are fast catching up. Since DMFs establish trust in APIs from across the world, we feel this healthy competition between drugmakers from the two countries is good for the global pharmaceutical industry. 

Impressions: 4807

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-blog/dmf-filings-rise-4-5-in-q3-2025-china-holds-lead-india-records-20-growth-in-submissions

#PharmaFlow by PHARMACOMPASS
13 Nov 2025

WEEKLY NEWS RECAP #Phispers

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Aurobindo’s sartan banned in Europe; Dr. Reddy’s cost optimization drive continues, sells off another site
This week, Phispers brings you news from Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories in India which is divesting its API plant in Hyderabad in order to optimize its cost structure. J&J and Bayer’s blood thinner Xarelto was found to reduce cardiovascular risks in heart patients. Following the footsteps of GSK and Novartis, Pfizer too got a chief digital office on board, as it revamped its top brass a fortnight after announcing a new CEO. Meanwhile a third sartan was found to be contaminated with low levels of NDEA and the EU has taken action against its manufacturer — India’s Aurobindo Pharma — by suspending its CEP. FDA released a method to detect NDMA and NDEA impurities in valsartan drug products. And generic versions of the world’s biggest selling drug — AbbVie’s Humira — went on sale in Europe. However, in the US, AbbVie has staved off all Humira knockoffs until 2023. Dr. Reddy’s cost cutting measures gain momentum; divests API manufacturing site   Earlier this month, Dr. Reddy's Laboratories (DRL) had announced the sale of its antibiotic manufacturing site and its related assets in Bristol, Tennessee, to Neopharma Inc, a wholly owned subsidiary of the UAE’s largest drug manufacturer headquartered in Abu Dhabi.  The Indian drug major’s cost cutting measures have gathered momentum. This week, DRL announced it is selling its API manufacturing  unit located in Jeedimetla, Hyderabad, to Therapiva Private Limited. In a regulatory filing, DRL said it has entered into a definitive agreement for the sale of this unit to Therapiva, a joint venture between Omnicare Drugs India (a wholly owned subsidiary of Neopharma LLC, Abu Dhabi) and Laxai Life Sciences. This divestiture is being done by way of slump sale (as a going concern) and includes all related fixed assets (land and building), current assets, current liabilities, and its employees, the company statement said. “The divestiture of our API manufacturing business unit is a step towards streamlining our manufacturing operations and optimizing our cost structures,” Sanjay Sharma, Executive Vice President and Head, Global Manufacturing Operations of DRL said. “We are confident that we have found in Therapiva, a buyer-partner who fully understands and appreciates the business unit and its people as a powerful strategic asset,” he added. However, the company did not disclose any financial details. PharmaCompass reviewed the Written Confirmation, issued by India’s drug regulator, to the site and found that the site manufactures Sumatriptan Succinate, Topiramate, Montelukast Sodium, Olanzapine, Doxazosin, Ondansetron, Donepezil and Escitalopram. The Written Confirmation is a certificate issued to certify compliance with standards of good manufacturing practices (GMP) for a manufacturing site are at least equivalent to the GMP of the European Union. After Huahai’s valsartan, Aurobindo stopped from supplying irbesartan into Europe   The detection of impurities – N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) and N-nitrosodiethylamine (NDEA) – in valsartan from Zhejiang Huahai Pharmaceuticals over the last few months has led to an EU-wide review of all valsartan medicines. The review was subsequently extended to other ‘sartan’ medicines when very low levels of NDEA were found in losartan made by Hetero Labs in India. European regulators say they have found the same impurity discovered in valsartan in both losartan made by Hetero Labs and now irbesartan manufactured by Aurobindo Pharma. Irbesartan is the third sartan to be found with low levels of NDEA. On October 8, 2018, the European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines & HealthCare (EDQM) suspended Aurobindo Pharma’s CEP (Certificate of Suitability), effectively stopping the supply in the EU of medicines containing irbesartan from this company. National authorities in the EU are also considering whether to recall medicines containing Aurobindo Pharma’s irbesartan from pharmacies as a precaution. “The review into the presence of impurities in sartans and their potential effects in patients is ongoing. EMA will continue working with national authorities, international partners and EDQM and will provide updates as more information becomes available,” an EMA statement said. FDA releases method to detect NDMA and NDEA; issues clarification on import alert   This week, the US drug regulator posted a redeveloped combined gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC/MS) headspace method for detecting the presence of impurities NDMA and NDEA in valsartan drug products. Previously, the FDA had posted a GC/MS method for detection of NDMA in valsartan products. Upon detection of NDEA in valsartan products manufactured by Zhejiang Huahai, FDA redeveloped the testing method so that it can be used to detect and quantify levels of both NDMA and NDEA. In their announcement the FDA stated that the method should be validated by users if the resulting data are used to support a required quality assessment of the API or drug product, or if the results are used in a regulatory submission. The agency is also working on a GC/MS direct injection method for detection of NDMA and NDEA. PharmaCompass will post the method when it is available. This will provide an additional option before regulators and the industry to detect the two impurities. Meanwhile, the FDA clarified that it’s just one site of Zhejiang Huahai on which the import ban has been slapped. On September 28, the FDA had announced it had imposed an import alert banning “all” APIs made by Huahai and finished drug products made using Huahai’s APIs from entering the US. But the actual import alert on the FDA website appeared to be directed only to the Chinese pharma’s Chuannan site in the city of Taizhou, China. FDA corrected this mistake recently. In an alert, Health Canada said it had found the Chuannan manufacturing site of Huahai to be non-compliant with requirements of good manufacturing practices for the manufacture of APIs. It also listed the products manufactured at the Chuannan site. These are — “candesartan, irbesartan, losartan, olmesartan, telmisartan, and valsartan, which are used in the manufacture of a class of drugs known as angiotension receptor blockers (drugs that are used to treat high blood pressure and heart failure); levetiracetam, which is used in the manufacture of an anti-epileptic drug; nevirapine, which is used in the manufacture of an antiviral drug; and repaglinide, which is used in the manufacture of an anti-diabetic drug,” Health Canada said. J&J gets key label expansion for its blood thinner Xarelto   Johnson & Johnson and Bayer’s Xarelto, which has been gradually losing market share to Pfizer and Bristol-Myers Squibb’s Eliquis, just won a much-needed new indication. According to analysts, this new indication can bring in US$ 1.5 billion for Xarelto from the US alone. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Xarelto as a drug that can reduce cardiovascular (CV) risks in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) or peripheral artery disease (PAD), a J&J statement said. That makes it the first novel oral anticoagulant (NOAC) approved for that market, ahead of Eliquis and Boehringer Ingelheim’s Pradaxa. The drug is the first and only Factor Xa inhibitor (a class of anticoagulant drugs that act directly upon Factor X in the coagulation cascade, without using antithrombin as a mediator) approved to reduce the risk of major CV events in people with CAD or PAD. This decision of the FDA is based on data from the Phase 3 COMPASS trial, which showed Xarelto with aspirin reduced stroke by 42 percent, cardiovascular death by 22 percent and heart attack by 14 percent compared with aspirin alone in this patient group. In August this year, Bayer had gained approval for Xarelto in Europe for this indication. The first launch is planned for Germany. There are currently four NOACs on the market: Xarelto (rivaroxaban) from J&J and Bayer; Eliquis (apixaban) from Pfizer and Bristol-Myers Squibb; Pradaxa (dabigatran) from Boehringer Ingelheim; and Savaysa (edoxaban) from Daiichi Sankyo. So far, Xarelto is the only one to have picked up this indication. Earlier this year, results from the MARINER and COMMANDER HF trials on Xarelto failed to show expected benefits and risk reductions, including in patients at risk of venous thromboembolism. This new approval provides Xarelto with a differentiator against market leader Eliquis. In the second quarter, Xarelto’s US sales were US$ 679 million, nearly 6 percent higher than the same quarter in 2017. Meanwhile, Eliquis’ US sales were US$ 979 million, up 39 percent year over year. Pfizer rejigs top brass, gets chief digital officer on board   A fortnight back, Phispers had reported how Ian Read is to step down as CEO of Pfizer, handing over the baton to the chief operating officer Albert Bourla. Following the change of leadership, Pfizer is also revamping its executive team. As part of a boardroom shake-up, and owing to the growing importance of digital technology, the American pharmaceutical behemoth has appointed Lidia Fonseca as its chief digital officer in R&D and business process. Pfizer is following the example of GlaxoSmithKline and Novartis, two big pharma companies that have already appointed chief digital officers to transform R&D and relationships with customers. Fonseca will be in charge of creating and implementing a “strategy that accelerates and improves the company’s digital capabilities.” At present, she is the chief information officer at Quest Diagnostics and will join Pfizer’s executive leadership team in January. Other changes at Pfizer include Mikael Dolsten, who will assume oversight of the chief medical officer’s role. Angela Hwang will become group president of Pfizer’s innovative business, responsible for the entire portfolio of innovative medicines. Freda Lewis-Hall will assume a new role as Pfizer’s chief patient officer, advocating on behalf of all patients who rely on Pfizer’s new drugs.  John Young — presently Pfizer’s president of Innovative Health — will assume responsibility for “strategy, business development, portfolio management and valuation activities; business analytics; global commercial operations; and Patient and Health Impact,” among other areas, Pfizer said. Young will also head Pfizer’s consumer healthcare business. Biosimilars of world’s best-selling drug Humira go on sale this week in Europe   Generic versions of AbbVie’s Humira, the world’s biggest-selling drug, go on sale in Europe this week. However, in the US, Illinois-headquartered AbbVie has extended the drug’s shelf life by staving off Humira knockoffs to 2023. Humira is used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis and psoriasis. The deal this time is with Novartis’ generic arm, Sandoz, which has agreed to launch its biosimilar in the US later (in 2023) than other competitors. As per the current agreement, Amgen will launch its copycat version on January 31, 2023, Samsung Bioepis and Merck on June 30, 2023, Mylan on July 31, 2023, while Sandoz will launch it on September 30, 2023. For AbbVie, the stakes are indeed high — last year, Humira brought in US$ 18 billion for the drug maker, and the sales are expected to increase by US$ 3 billion in 2020, driven by annual price hikes. On its part, AbbVie now has five years to get new drugs lined up to replace Humira. In the EU though, Sandoz rolled out its biosimilar of Humira, branded as Amgevita, on October 16. Novartis said its Sandoz unit is launching its product Hyrimoz initially in Britain, with other markets set to follow.  

Impressions: 3877

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-phisper/aurobindo-s-sartan-banned-in-europe-dr-reddy-s-cost-optimization-drive-continues-sells-off-another-site

#Phispers by PHARMACOMPASS
18 Oct 2018

NEWS #PharmaBuzz

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https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240820297201/en

BUSINESSWIRE
01 Sep 2024
New Japanese Patent For Edoxaban
New Japanese Patent For Edoxaban

20 Feb 2024

// PRESS RELEASE

https://moehs.com/new-japanese-patent-for-edoxaban/

PRESS RELEASE
20 Feb 2024

https://www.zent2u.com/news/dossier-edoxaban-available-b2b-partners

PRESS RELEASE
13 Sep 2023

https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230823419672/en

BUSINESSWIRE
25 Aug 2023

https://amilifesciences.com/media.php

PRESS RELEASE
27 Mar 2023

https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/index.cfm?event=overview.process&ApplNo=213064

FDA
16 Nov 2022