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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: 4781

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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India partially lifts Hydroxychloroquine, Paracetamol export ban; delays by FTC lead to nixing of US$ 1 billion Sandoz deal
This week, Phispers has more updates on the deadly novel coronavirus. The US, which has reported over 400,000 cases of Covid-19, is receiving shipments of 29 million doses of hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), an anti-malarial drug believed to be a treatment for the disease. There is visible traction in the area of vaccine development as British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline made an equity investment of US$ 250 million in Vir Biotechnology that is working on solutions for coronaviruses. GSK also struck a deal with China’s Xiamen Innovax Biotech, which is also working on a Covid-19 vaccine. Similarly, a potential vaccine partially funded by Bill Gates has begun testing it in people, after Moderna made a similar announcement last month. In non-Covid news, Indian drugmaker Cipla successfully completed Phase-3 clinical trials for its generic version of GSK’s respiratory drug Advair Diskus. And Novartis and Aurobindo Pharma USA announced they are terminating their US$ 1 billion deal wherein Aurobindo was to buy the US general oral solids and dermatology businesses of Sandoz. Covid-19 update: India supplies HCQ to US; surge in drug demand for critical patients   The President of United States Donald Trump confirmed that shipments of 29 million doses of hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), an anti-malarial drug believed to be effective in treatment of the novel coronavirus, were on its way to the US. “A lot of it comes out of India,” Trump said. This announcement was preceded by reports of Trump talking about a possible retaliation if the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi didn’t allow HCQ to reach the US. “I know that he stopped it for other countries (but) I spoke to him yesterday and we had a very good talk... I said we’d appreciate you allowing our supply to come out. If he doesn’t allow it to come... there may be retaliation,” Trump had said on Monday, speaking of his phone conversation with Modi. The following day, he confirmed that 29 million doses of HCQ were reaching the US. “I asked him (Modi) if he would release it. He was great. He was really good,” Trump said. US has reported over 400,000 cases of Covid-19, and over 13,000 deaths. Trump’s bulk purchase of the drug, which he called a “game-changer”, is in anticipation of it being declared a viable treatment option. HCQ is being tested on at least 1,500 Covid-19 patients in New York. Last month, the Indian government restricted the exports of 13 APIs along with some of their finished formulations. The list included paracetamol, tinidazole, metronidazole, acyclovir, vitamin B1, vitamin B6, vitamin B12, progesterone, chloramphenicol and neomycin. This was followed by the Indian government issuing a directive which prohibited the export of HCQ API and formulations made from HCQ. The directives did, however, offer exemptions to some exports like those made from special economic zones/export-oriented units as well as those “allowed by the Government of India to other countries on humanitarian grounds on case to case basis on the recommendation of Ministry of External Affairs”. Last week, the restriction on the drug exports was lifted on all the APIs along with their finished formulations, except paracetamol and HCQ. India manufactures around 70 per cent (approximately 200 million tablets of 200 mg each) of the world’s HCQ. Last week, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had issued an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) to permit the emergency use of HCQ to treat adults who were hospitalized with COVID-19 for whom a clinical trial was not available. However, the drug is currently placed on FDA’s drug shortage list and imports are the only way out for the US, which has seen the maximum reported cases of Covid-19 in the world. On Tuesday, India’s Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) spokesperson said: “In view of the humanitarian aspects of the pandemic, it has been decided that India would license paracetamol and HCQ in appropriate quantities to all our neighboring countries who are dependent on our capabilities. We will also be supplying these essential drugs to some nations who have been particularly badly affected by the pandemic”. There is likely to be further pressure on the drug supply chain. According to a report published in STAT by Pharmalot, there has been a significant increase in demand in the US for medicines needed for patients who are placed on ventilators. The list includes sedatives, anesthetics, painkillers, and muscle relaxants like propofol, dexmedetomidine, etomidate, ketamine, lorazepam, midazolam, hydromorphone, fentanyl, morphine, cisatracurium, rocuronium, succinylcholine chloride, and vecuronium. PharmaCompass has generated detailed supply chain map reports for paracetamol and hydroxychloroquine. In case you’re interested, email us at support@pharmacompass.com Cipla’s Advair generic successfully completes Phase-3 clinical   Indian drugmaker Cipla Ltd has said it has successfully completed the clinical endpoint study evaluating the safety and efficacy of its generic Advair Diskus, GlaxoSmithKline Plc’s respiratory drug. The Mumbai-headquartered company said Phase-3 clinical trials were conducted over a 15-month period at more than 100 sites in the US enrolling 1,400 asthma patients. If approved, Cipla’s generic Advair will be the fourth such drug. UK-based Hikma Pharmaceuticals is expected to launch its generic Advair in the second half of 2020. Analysts expect Cipla to be able to launch the drug only in FY 2023, as this is a complex drug. In February, Sandoz had said it has stopped work on the generic version of Advair, after working on it for years. Sandoz’s parent Novartis recorded an impairment charge of US$ 442 million related to its write-down of the Advair generic program. The product — fluticasone propionate and salmeterol inhalation powder (100/50 mcg) — is indicated to treat asthma in patients four years and older as a twice-daily prescription medicine and in the long term to treat chronic obstructive pulmonary, including chronic bronchitis, emphysema, or both.  Advair Diskus and its generic equivalents posted US sales of about US$ 2.9 billion for the 12-month period ending February 2020. While the drug generated more than US$ 4 billion in revenue for GSK in 2017, prices have come crashing down since the launch of Mylan’s generic-version at a discount of about 70 percent. Analysts now estimate the market size, including generics, at roughly US$ 1 billion. Delays by FTC lead to nixing of US$ 1 billion Sandoz deal between Novartis, Aurobindo   In a statement, Novartis AG has said it has terminated its US$ 1 billion deal to sell the Sandoz US generic oral solids and dermatology businesses to Aurobindo Pharma USA Inc. The decision was taken mutually by Aurobindo Pharma USA Inc and Novartis. According to the statement, the decision had to be taken because approval from the US Federal Trade Commission for the transaction was not obtained within anticipated timelines. Had the deal been cleared, it would have created the second-largest generics player in the US. According to news reports, there’s no breakup fee associated with the termination. Sandoz will continue to operate its oral solids and dermatology business as part of the Sandoz US business. The deal was signed in September 2018, as part of Novartis CEO Vas Narasimhan’s plan to focus on innovative medicines. At that time, selling off the US oral generics company seemed like a wise step as pricing pressure had mounted across the US, impacting Sandoz’s overall performance. Originally, Novartis was hoping to close the deal in 2019, but US antitrust review caused significant delays. The regulators had requested more information on a lawsuit against Aurobindo, a development that pushed the planned closure to 2020. According to a report published in The Economic Times, brokerages see the termination of the deal as a setback for Indian drugmaker Aurobindo Pharma’s efforts to scale up sales in the US even though many analysts say the cancellation has also eased the financial burden for the company. In 2019, increased antitrust scrutiny on biopharma deals became commonplace. Such scrutinies led to multiple delays in Roche’s US$ 5.1 billion acquisition of Spark Therapeutics and forced Celgene to sell its blockbuster psoriasis drug Otezla to win clearance for its US$ 74 billion merger with Bristol Myers Squibb. It also derailed Illumina’s proposed US$ 1.2 billion offer for smaller DNA sequencer player Pacific Biosciences. Covid-19 vaccine update: GSK buys stake in Vir Biotech, Innovax; human trials at Moderna, Inovio   There is visible traction in the area of vaccine development for the deadly novel coronavirus. British pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline is making an equity investment in Vir Biotechnology as part of a collaboration to research and develop solutions for coronaviruses. According to the terms of the deal, GSK is making an equity investment of US$ 250 million in Vir. The companies say they will use Vir’s proprietary monoclonal antibody platform technology to accelerate existing anti-viral antibodies and identify new ones, use GSK’s expertise in functional genomics and combine their capabilities in CRISPR screening and artificial intelligence. GSK-Vir’s immediate focus will be on VIR-7831 and VIR-7832, a pair of antibodies identified by Vir’s monoclonal antibody technology that bind tightly to the spike protein of the novel coronavirus. The companies expect to begin Phase II testing of the therapies within the next three to five months. A few days back, GSK had struck a vaccine development agreement with China’s Xiamen Innovax Biotech. Innovax is developing its Covid-19 XWG-03 vaccine candidate technology. Meanwhile, the first human trial of a vaccine to prevent the coronavirus could advance to the next step this spring, Moderna Chairman Noubar Afeyan said. Afeyan said Moderna has entered phase 1 trials and is likely to enter into phase 2 trials by early summer.  Public distribution of such a vaccine is likely in the next 12 to 18 months, which would be the “ultimate game changer” in the fight against the pandemic, White House health advisor Anthony Fauci said. Meanwhile, a potential coronavirus vaccine funded by Bill Gates has begun testing in people. After Moderna, Inovio’s candidate INO-4800 is the second potential coronavirus vaccine to start human trials in the US. According to reports, Inovio’s vaccine trials have started in Philadelphia, Kansas City. Inovio Pharmaceuticals, a small biotech in Pennsylvania, received regulatory clearance to begin testing. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and other nonprofits have poured funding into Inovio’s vaccine project. The biotech said it expects to have early safety data by late summer and aims to produce 1 million doses by the end of 2020.  

Impressions: 2314

https://www.pharmacompass.com/radio-compass-phisper/india-partially-lifts-hydroxychloroquine-paracetamol-export-ban-delays-by-ftc-lead-to-nixing-of-us-1-billion-sandoz-deal

#Phispers by PHARMACOMPASS
09 Apr 2020

NEWS #PharmaBuzz

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https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2026/05/28/3302675/0/en/bioxcel-therapeutics-presents-new-data-from-serenity-at-home-phase-3-trial-for-agitation-associated-with-bipolar-disorders-or-schizophrenia-at-2026-ascp-annual-meeting.html

GLOBENEWSWIRE
28 May 2026

https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/index.cfm?event=overview.process&ApplNo=208103

FDA
15 Apr 2026

https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2026/04/08/3269975/0/en/BioXcel-Therapeutics-Announces-Enrollment-of-First-Patients-in-U-S-Department-of-War-Funded-Study-of-BXCL501-Sublingual-Dexmedetomidine-for-Treatment-of-Acute-Stress-Reactions.html

GLOBENEWSWIRE
08 Apr 2026

https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2026/04/01/3266468/0/en/BioXcel-Therapeutics-Announces-Food-Drug-Administration-Acceptance-of-Supplemental-New-Drug-Application-for-Use-of-IGALMI-in-the-At-Home-Setting.html

GLOBENEWSWIRE
01 Apr 2026

https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/index.cfm?event=overview.process&ApplNo=218675

FDA
09 Mar 2026

https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/index.cfm?event=overview.process&ApplNo=220315

FDA
25 Feb 2026