| Literature DB >> 32232676 |
Paul Cornes1, Pere Gascon2, Arnold G Vulto3,4, Matti Aapro5.
Abstract
Febrile neutropenia (FN) is a serious complication of chemotherapy, which can cause significant morbidity and mortality, result in dose delays and reductions and, ultimately, reduce cancer survival. Over the past decade, the availability of biosimilar filgrastim (short-acting granulocyte colony-stimulating factor [G-CSF]) has transformed patient access, with clear evidence of clinical benefit at preventing FN at reduced costs. In 2019, seven biosimilar pegfilgrastims (long-acting G-CSFs) were licensed, creating optimal market conditions and choice for prescribers. FN affects up to 117 per 1000 cancer patients, with mortality rates in the range of 2-21%. By reducing FN incidence and improving chemotherapy relative dose intensity (RDI), G-CSF has been associated with a 3.2% absolute survival benefit. Guidelines recommend primary prophylaxis and that filgrastim be administered for 10-14 days, while pegfilgrastim is administered once per cycle. When taken according to the guidelines, pegfilgrastim and filgrastim are equally effective. However, in routine clinical practice, filgrastim is often under-dosed (< 7 days) and has been shown to be inferior to pegfilgrastim at reducing FN incidence, hospitalisations and maintaining RDI. Once-per-cycle administration with pegfilgrastim might also aid patient adherence. The introduction of biosimilar pegfilgrastim should instigate a rethink of neutropenia management. Biosimilar pegfilgrastim offers countries using biosimilar filgrastim opportunities to improve adherence and thus cancer survival, whilst offering economic benefits for countries using reference pegfilgrastim. These benefits can be realised in full if biosimilar pegfilgrastim becomes part of routine clinical practice supported by drug and therapeutic committees implementing guidelines with multidisciplinary support in the hospital.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32232676 PMCID: PMC7211191 DOI: 10.1007/s40259-020-00411-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BioDrugs ISSN: 1173-8804 Impact factor: 5.807
Biosimilars of pegfilgrastim approved in Europe and the US
| Brand name | Manufacturer | Registration trial | EMA approval | FDA approval |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pelgraz® | Accord Healthcare | Desai et al. 2018 [ Phase III randomised, assessor-blinded, multicentre study on 589 breast cancer patients with reference arms of US–Neulasta and EU–Neulasta | September 2018 | |
| Udenyca® | Coherus | Dose–response triala | September 2018 | November 2018 |
| Fulphila® | Mylan | Waller et al. 2019 [ Phase III randomised, assessor-blinded study on 194 breast cancer patients with reference arm of EU–Neulasta | November 2018 | June 2018 |
| Pelmeg® | Cinfa Biotech/Mundipharma | Dose-response triala | November 2018 | |
| Ziextenzo® | Sandoz | Harbeck et al. 2016 [ Phase III randomised, assessor-blinded, multicentre study on 316 breast cancer patients with reference arm of EU–Neulasta | November 2018 | November 2019 |
| Grasustek® | Juta Pharma | Grasustek (EPAR)b Phase III randomised, assessor-blinded, multicentre study on 254 breast cancer patients with reference arm of EU–Neulasta | April 2019 | |
| Pegfilgrastim Mundipharma® | Mundipharma | Dose-response triala | December 2019 |
aAs reported in EMA EPAR available at https://www.ema.europa.eu
bEMA Grasustek EPAR. Available at https://www.ema.europa.eu/en/medicines/human/EPAR/grasustek
EMA European Medicines Agency, EPAR European public assessment report, FDA The Food and Drug Administration
Fig. 1Algorithm for assessing FN risk and the need for primary prophylactic G-CSF. Adapted from guidelines by the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer [1], the European Society of Medical Oncology [5] and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network [16]. FN febrile neutropenia, G-CSF granulocyte-colony stimulating factor
Fig. 2European survey results highlighting the under-dosing of filgrastim by both weight and duration of therapy. The survey of 88 healthcare professionals (78 physicians; 10 pharmacists) from six European countries (Germany n = 3; Italy n = 7; Portugal n = 31; Poland n = 29; Lithuania n = 12; Latvia n = 6) was undertaken in April–May 2019. Respondents were based in oncology clinics (n = 3); general hospitals (n = 36); or specialist haematology or oncology centres (n = 48). HCPs healthcare professionals
Key clinical and economic benefits offered by biosimilar pegfilgrastim
| Clinical benefits vs filgrastim (< 7 days) | Economic benefits vs reference pegfilgrastim |
|---|---|
| Reduced FN incidence | Cost savings > 30% |
| Reduced FN-related hospitalisations | Increased patient access |
| Reduced chemotherapy dose delays | Create additional budget for new medicines |
| Improved relative dose intensity | Financial sustainability |
| Improved adherence to G-CSF guidelines | Improved device/additional handling features |
| Reduced hospital visits and risk of nosocomial infections | |
| Improved patient acceptability and adherence |
FN febrile neutropenia, G-CSF granulocyte colony-stimulating factors
| Pegfilgrastim has been shown to be superior to filgrastim at reducing chemotherapy-related neutropenia and at achieving target dose intensity, as the latter is often under-dosed in clinical practice. |
| Use of biosimilar pegfilgrastim will facilitate access and, supported by guidelines and clinical rules, enable the full potential of these life-saving benefits to be realised at reduced cost. |