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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: 4798

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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Dr. Reddy’s restrained from rolling out generic opioid addiction drug; FDA rejects Mylan’s Advair generic
This week in Phispers, there is news on Indian drugmaker Dr. Reddy’s, which got an FDA nod for the generic version of Indivior’s opioid addiction treatment — Suboxone. However, soon after the approval, a court order restrained it from rolling out the copycat drug. The FDA, once again, rejected the generic version of Mylan’s Advair. Theranos, a privately-held health technology firm, once valued at US$ 9 billion, saw a scam that involved its founder and an ex-employee. Teva said it will discontinue a phase III trial of its migraine drug. A Bio Convention-related event in Boston drew condemnation from the pharma industry for its exploitation of female dancers. And Roche bought complete stake in Foundation Medicine. Dr. Reddy’s bags FDA nod for generic Suboxone, but can’t roll it out due to patent dispute   Last week, Indian pharma major Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories won a US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for its generic version of Indivior’s opioid addiction treatment — Suboxone — and also received a court order that restrained it from rolling out the copycat drug. On June 14, the FDA approved the first generic versions of Suboxone (buprenorphine and naloxone) sublingual film (applied under the tongue) for the treatment of opioid dependence. Mylan Technologies Inc, a subsidiary of Mylan NV and Indian drugmaker Dr. Reddy's Laboratories, received the FDA approval to make the generic. Suboxone is a sublingual film that is placed under the tongue to ease addiction cravings. Indivior had filed patent infringement lawsuits against both Dr. Reddy’s and Mylan. A district court in New Jersey granted Indivior a temporary restraining order that compels Dr. Reddy's (DRL) to immediately cease its launch activities related to Suboxone film. A hearing in the case between Dr. Reddy’s and Indivior is scheduled for June 28. Indivior will have to pay Dr. Reddy’s US$ 18 million if the generics company comes up successful. Suboxone had once brought in US$ 2 billion in sales a year for Indivior. Last month, Indivior had reached a settlement in the US with a group of companies over patent-infringement litigation related to its Suboxone opioid addiction treatment. In September last year, Indivior and Monosol Rx, LLC had entered into a settlement agreement with Mylan, thereby resolving patent litigation related to Suboxone film. Indivior has come under fire for its strategies to block generic competition to Suboxone. In 2016, it was sued by 35 states when it discontinued the original tablet version of the drug and pushed doctors to switch patients to the film strip. Last week, the FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb had said in a statement that the FDA is taking new steps to advance the development of improved treatments for opioid use disorder, and to make sure these medicines are accessible to patients who need them. GSK breathes easy yet again as FDA finds deficiencies in Mylan’s Advair generic   After the Suboxone generic court order, there was more bad news Mylan had to contend with. The drugmaker was second time unlucky in getting US regulatory approval for its generic version of GlaxoSmithKline’s blockbuster lung drug — Advair. Last week, the USFDA rejected the generic drug once more as it found “minor deficiencies” in the treatment. The deficiencies in Mylan’s generic Advair are to be relayed in a Complete Response Letter (CRL) on June 27, 2018. However, the damage may not be that much. “Because our Abbreviated New Drug Application has received a priority designation, our approval could be received prior to the standard 90-day time period following the date of our response to the Complete Response Letter,” Mylan said in a statement. It’s not clear whether Mylan will be able to resolve the deficiencies and get approval this year. “Upon receipt of the official Complete Response Letter, we will determine what, if any, impact that it could have on our full year 2018 outlook,” the company said. The FDA has declined to approve several Advair generics in the past from drugmakers such as Novartis AG, Hikma Pharmaceuticals and Mylan. Mylan was the first to get the FDA’s cold shoulder for an Advair generic in March last year. Hikma and Vectura also faced dismissal in May. Earlier this year, Novartis’ Sandoz was asked by the FDA to furbish more data on its Advair copycat. Disgraced Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes indicted for fraud   Privately-held health technology firm Theranos witnessed a scam as its founder Elizabeth Holmes and former chief operating officer Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani were indicted in wire fraud schemes. Holmes and Balwani allegedly perpetrated multi-million dollar schemes to defraud investors, and a separate scheme to defraud doctors and patients. Theranos was once valued at US$ 9 billion. Holmes, 34, founded Theranos in 2003.  Holmes was once lauded as the youngest self-made female billionaire. Balwani, 53, was employed at Theranos from September of 2009 through 2016.  Theranos has a stated mission to revolutionize medical laboratory testing through allegedly innovative methods for drawing blood, testing blood, and interpreting the resulting patient data.  According to the indictment, Holmes and Balwani used advertisements and solicitations to encourage and induce doctors and patients to use Theranos’s blood testing laboratory services, even though the defendants knew Theranos was not capable of consistently producing accurate and reliable results for certain blood tests.  In addition, the tests performed on Theranos technology were likely to contain inaccurate and unreliable results.  Three months back, the Securities and Exchange Commission had sued Holmes and Theranos for the “massive fraud” at the company. Both Holmes and Balwani surrendered last week and were released on US$ 500,000 bond each. If convicted, both would face up to 20 years in prison. Topless dancers at unofficial Bio convention party antagonizes industry   The Bio International Convention in Boston ended on a rather controversial note last week, with the Party at Bio Not Associated with Bio (better known as PABNAB) drawing condemnation for its scantily-clad female dancers. Some of the dancers had sponsor logos painted on their bodies. Now in its 14th year, the extravagant PABNAB is in direct contrast to the Bio Convention, which is a networking event. An attendee, Kate Strayer-Benton, provided photos of the PABNAB to the media and openly spoke against it. Director of strategy at Momenta Pharma, Strayer-Benton said the entertainment was “beyond tone-deaf.” Strayer-Bentone said the first thing she noticed were body-painted, topless dancers. “It felt like a line had so obviously been crossed,” she said. One of the three organizers of PABNAB, the C14 Consulting Group, defended the jamboree. CEO of C14 Martina Molsbergen said the party was “edgy and artsy” — and in line with what its sponsors have come to expect. She said C14 has received “very positive feedback from sponsors”. BIO executives took note. News reports said the committee on workforce development, diversity, and inclusion discussed the event on an emergency phone call last week and decided members who continue to sponsor the event would not be welcome in the trade group. Ken Lisaius, BIO’s senior vice present of communications, said the event conflicted with their principles. “We cannot stand for an event like that that is debasing and is frankly not consistent with our standards around inclusion,” said John Maraganore, BIO chairman and CEO of Alnylam. The event drew parallels from a JP Morgan conference held in 2016. In the LifeSci Advisors afterparty, a number of young female models were hired to escort guests. BioCentury president Karen Bernstein and SV Life Sciences Advisers managing partner Kate Bingham had written an open letter to the biopharma industry in 2016. The letter had sparked considerable outrage, with some 230 signatures from industry leaders. Setback for Teva as its potential blockbuster migraine drug study is discontinued   Teva’s fremanezumab — an investigational therapy for the preventive treatment of migraine— has been a linchpin of the Israeli drugmaker’s growth plans. However, Teva has said it will discontinue the phase III trial of its treatment for chronic cluster headaches, after a futility analysis of the study revealed that the primary endpoint is unlikely to be met.  Teva said a late-stage program for fremanezumab failed in patients with chronic cluster headaches. Teva is abandoning that indication, but plans to push ahead with its study in episodic cluster headaches. Moreover, there is trouble brewing at its active ingredient supplier Celltrion in South Korea. Earlier this year Teva officials had said fremanezumab might not be delayed by “limited” problems at the Celltrion plant where its API would be made. However, experts say the problems at Celltrion probably aren't as “limited”. A drug manufacturing specialist told Leerink analysts that the FDA warnings issued to Celltrion likely extend beyond the plant's fill/finish operations. The Celltrion facility would be Teva’s main API supplier for fremanezumab. “The specialist believes that while the inspection that resulted in the Form 483 and Warning Letter was done only at the fill/finish part of the facility, many of the observations cited, particularly around data integrity, could be present at the API manufacturing part of the facility as well,” the Leerink analysts said. Last month, Teva had confirmed, that the US FDA had extended the goal date of the Biologics License Application (BLA) for fremanezumab. The Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) action date for fremanezumab is currently set for September 16, 2018. There is competition in migraine therapy. Amgen and Novartis have won the FDA nod for Aimovig, which has been priced quite aggressively. Analysts have estimated peak sales for Aimovig at about US$ 1.2 billion. Moreover, Eli Lilly’s galcanezumab is under review at the FDA. Celltrion, which received a complete response letter for its biosimilar of Roche’s blockbuster cancer drug Herceptin (tied to a warning letter received this year), has already resubmitted its application for the candidate. Some time back, Celltrion had resubmitted its application for its biosimilar candidate of Rituxan. Meanwhile, New Jersey is dangling the tax carrot before Teva. The state economic development group has laid out US$ 40 million in tax savings to tempt Teva into moving its US headquarters to a 345,000-square-foot space at 400 Interpace Parkway in Parsippany. The NJ Economic Development Authority is expecting Teva to bring in 843 jobs. Roche buys complete stake in Foundation Medicine by putting in US$ 2.4 billion   Roche threw its weight behind Foundation Medicine three years ago. And it seems like the R&D collaboration is bearing fruit. And now, Roche is investing US$ 2.4 billion more into the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Foundation, thereby acquiring it completely. In January 2015, Roche had acquired a majority stake in Foundation Medicine by paying a US$ 50 a share premium. Foundation Medicine is a personalized medicine company. Though Foundation Medicine does have an FDA-approved diagnostic called FoundationOne CDx, Roche is choosing to highlight its broader potential in comprehensive genomic profiling of cancers, which can both guide development of treatments and match patients with the appropriate therapies. The buyout follows other acquisitions by Roche in the recent past, such as the acquisition of Flatiron, a tech-startup building an electronic health record system used by oncologists, in February this year. In December 2017, Roche had bought Ignyta for US$ 1.7 billion.  

Impressions: 4222

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-phisper/dr-reddy-s-restrained-from-rolling-out-generic-opioid-addiction-drug-fda-rejects-mylan-s-advair-generic

#Phispers by PHARMACOMPASS
21 Jun 2018

NEWS #PharmaBuzz

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https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2026/06/04/3306708/33240/en/emergent-biosolutions-supports-victoria-s-voice-foundation-s-national-naloxone-awareness-day-to-help-save-lives-from-opioid-overdose.html

GLOBENEWSWIRE
04 Jun 2026

https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2026/06/02/3305134/0/en/scienture-receives-u-s-patent-covering-rezenopy-naloxone-hcl-nasal-spray-10-mg-strengthening-intellectual-property-protection-through-2041.html

GLOBENEWSWIRE
02 Jun 2026

https://www.newswise.com/articles/atipamezole-may-be-a-new-way-to-combat-deadly-opioid-overdoses

NEWSWIRE
20 May 2026

https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/padagis-announces-shelf-life-extension-for-its-naloxone-nasal-spray-302761003.html#:~:text=ALLEGAN%2C%20Mich.%2C%20May%205,access%20to%20lifesaving%2C%20cost%2Deffective

PR NEWSWIRE
05 May 2026

https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2026/04/09/3271432/33240/en/Emergent-BioSolutions-Partners-with-British-Columbia-to-Supply-NARCAN-Nasal-Spray-for-the-Launch-of-the-Expanded-BC-Take-Home-Naloxone-Program.html

GLOBENEWSWIRE
09 Apr 2026

https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2026/04/07/3269099/33240/en/Emergent-BioSolutions-Launches-New-NARCAN-Nasal-Spray-Carrying-Case-and-Multipacks-Alongside-College-Campus-Outreach-to-Expand-Opioid-Overdose-Preparedness.html

GLOBENEWSWIRE
07 Apr 2026