On 30 October 2025, Celltrion announced that, according to IQVIA, its Vegzelma®, biosimilar to Roche/Genentech’s Avastin® (bevacizumab), has achieved 50% market share in Japan, surpassing competing innovator and biosimilars to become that top bevacizumab product. Celltrion states that Vegzelma® has more than tripled its market share, which stood at 15% the same time last year.
Vegzelma®’s success follows that of Celltrion’s other oncology biosimilar, Herzuma®, referencing Roche’s Herceptin® (trastuzumab), which holds a 74% market share in Japan. Celltrion further reports that its autoimmune disease portfolio has shown strong performance, with Remsima®, referencing Janssen’s Remicade® (infliximab), and Yuflyma®, referencing AbbVie’s Humira® (adalimumab), achieving market shares of 43% and 14%, respectively.
Celltrion attributes this growth to the success of its localised sales and distribution strategy, tailored to Japan’s Diagnosis Procedure Combination (DPC) system, a reimbursement framework that encourages the use of cost-effective medicines such as biosimilars.
In September 2025, Celltrion announced that its Avtozma®/CT-P47, biosimilar to Roche’s Actemra® (tocilizumab), became the first biosimilar tocilizumab approved in Japan. This followed the Japanese launch of Celltrion’s biosimilar ustekinumab, Steqeyma®, referencing J&J/Janssen’s Stelara®, in July 2025.
