Biosimilar infliximab introduction into the gastroenterology care pathway in a large acute Irish teaching hospital: a story behind the evidence
Affiliation
Pharmaceutical Care Research Group, School of Pharmacy, University College Cork, College Road, Ireland/St Luke’s General Hospital, Freshford Road, Kilkenny, Ireland/Department of Accounting, Finance and Information Systems, Cork University Business Schools, University College Cork, College Road, Ireland/Cost Accounting & Funding Team, National Finance Division, Health Service Executive, First Floor East, Model Business Park, Model Farm Road, Cork, IrelandIssue Date
2018-02-27Keywords
INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASEGASTROENTEROLOGY
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Pro Pharma Communications InternationalJournal
Generics and Biosimilars Initiative Journal (GaBI Journal)DOI
10.5639/gabij.2018.0701.004Abstract
Background and aim: Biosimilar medicines are not considered exact replicas of originator biological medicines. As a result, prescribers can be hesitant to introduce such medicines into the clinical setting until evidence surfaces confirming their safety and effectiveness. In Ireland, a national biosimilar medicines policy is currently in development but the decision to prescribe biosimilar medicines remains at the discretion of the physician. The aim of this descriptive review is to tell the story of the evidence used by a large acute Irish teaching hospital to introduce biosimilar infliximab CT-P13 for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in a safe and timely manner into routine care. Methods: To explore the evidence supporting the effective introduction of biosimilar infliximab in a large acute Irish teaching hospital, a literature review was conducted. Evidence consisted of published studies, reviews, reports, position statements, articles, clinical guidelines, and recommendations from national bodies, regulatory authorities and professional organizations. All evidence was published in English. Results and discussion: In September 2014, the accumulated evidence base provided physicians with reassurance to prescribe biosimilar infliximab CT-P13 for new patients suffering from IBD in this large acute Irish teaching hospital. In September 2016, as the evidence base grew, physicians began to safely and confidently switch patients from the originator infliximab product to the biosimilar product. Conclusion: There was a significant time lag between regulatory approval and clinical acceptance given that the European Medicines Agency had granted market authorization for biosimilar infliximab CT-P13 three years prior to the initiation of this hospital’s switching process. Although conservative in their execution, the authors conclude that with the existential concern and uncertainty still surrounding biosimilar medicines, a distinct and individualized approach for biosimilar medicine implementation is required. It is with hope that the Irish biosimilar medicines policy will improve upon biosimilar medicine clinical acceptance once published.Item Type
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enSponsors
Irish Research Council GOIPG/2016/635ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.5639/gabij.2018.0701.004
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