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Biosimilars Deals 2021

Explore our interactive biosimilar news updates, collating tailored reports by brand, INN, originator/biosimilar applicant, litigation, region, or date. Alternatively, review our weekly BioBlast updates below.

Pearce IP BioBlast® for the week ending 1 May 2026

Pearce IP provides weekly reports on global biosimilars activities in the Pearce IP BioBlast®. Significant biosimilar activities for the week ending 1 May 2026 are set out below:


Bevacizumab

On 1 May 2026, Aurobindo announced that its subsidiary, CuraTeQ Biologics, received Canadian approval for Bevqolva™ (bevacizumab), biosimilar to Genentech’s Avastin®… Read more here.

Pembrolizumab

At its meeting on 22 April 2026, the Subject Expert Committee (SEC) under India’s Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO) recommended approval of Enzene’s… Read more here.

Pembrolizumab, Nivolumab, Abatacept, Certolizumab

During its investor call on 22 April 2026, Amneal confirmed that, following its acquisition of Kashiv Biosciences, it is expecting to have 6 biosimilars launched in the US by 2027… Read more here.

Pertuzumab

On 29 April 2026, the European Commission approved Shanghai Henlius and Organon’s Poherdy® (pertuzumab) as the first biosimilar to Genentech/Roche’s Perjeta®… Read more here.

Ranibizumab

On 30 April 2026, Xbrane announced that it has resubmitted its BLA for biosimilar ranibizumab to the FDA following a Complete Response Letter (CRL) received in October… Read more here.

Semaglutide

Following the March 2026 launch of several generic equivalents of Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic® (semaglutide) in India and the “tentative approval” of Apotex’s generic… Read more here.

Tocilizumab

On 29 April 2026, Gedeon Richter announced that the European Commission has granted marketing authorisation for Tuyory ®, biosimilar to Roche’s RoActemra® (tocilizumab)… Read more here.
 
On 28 April 2026, Celltrion announced the launch of Avtozma®/CT-P47, biosimilar to Roche’s Actemra®(tocilizumab), in Japan.  Avtozma® is the first tocilizumab biosimilar… Read more here.

Trastuzumab

On 30 April 2026, Celltrion announced that it had submitted an application to the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for Herzuma® SC/CT-P6 SC, biosimilar to Roche’s​… Read more here.

Ustekinumab

On 1 May 2026, Janssen/Johnson & Johnson (J&J) announced that, on 15 April 2026, the FDA approved Stelara® (ustekinumab) for the treatment of children two years and older with… Read more here.

Zanidatamab, Tislelizumab

On 27 April 2026, Jazz Pharmaceuticals announced that the FDA accepted for priority review a supplemental Biologics License Application (sBLA) for Ziihera® (zanidatamab-hrii) in… Read more here.

 

About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist, life-sciences focussed, intellectual property/law firm offering lawyers and attorneys in Australia and New Zealand.

In 2025, Pearce IP was honoured by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer as a Top Specialist Firm, 5 Star Employer of Choice, and the “Standout Winner” for Inclusion and Culture (<100 employees).  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, Best Law Firms, among others.

Pearce IP is the only leading IP firm in Australia and New Zealand with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Naomi Pearce

Naomi Pearce

CEO, Executive Lawyer (AU, NZ), Patent Attorney (AU, NZ) & Trade Mark Attorney (AU)

Naomi is the CEO and Founder of Pearce IP, and is one of ANZ’s leading IP practitioners. Naomi is a market leading, strategic, commercially astute, patent lawyer, patent attorney and trade mark attorney, with over 29 years’ experience, and a background in molecular biology/biochemistry.

Ranked in virtually every notable legal directory, highly regarded by peers and clients, Naomi is renowned for her successful and elegant IP/legal strategies focussing on complex/multijurisdictional litigation, global FTO, and strategic advice.  Among other awards, Naomi is the 2026 Lexology Client Choice Winner for Patents, the 2024 Lawyers Weekly Women in LawExecutive of the Year”, the 2023 Lawyers Weekly “IP Partner of the Year”, the 2022 Lexology Client Choice Winner for Life Sciences, the 2022 Asia Pacific Women in Business Law Patent Lawyer of the Year”, and the 2021 Lawyers Weekly Women in Law “Partner of the Year”.  Ranked in Chambers Asia Pacific, Chambers Global,  IAM Patent 1000IAM Strategy 300, is a MIP “Patent Star”, and is recognised as a WIPR Leader for patents and trade marks. 

Pearce IP is the premier life sciences focussed firm in ANZ.  Commencing in 2017. Pearce IP is the 2025 Australasian Lawyer and NZ Lawyer 5-Star Employer of Choice & “Standout Winner” for Inclusion and Culture (<100 employees).  In 2021, Pearce IP was the Lawyers Weekly Australian Law Awards IP Team of the Year.

Chantal Savage

Chantal Savage

Special Counsel, Lawyer

Chantal is an intellectual property disputes lawyer with experience advising across the spectrum of IP rights, including patents, trade marks, copyright, plant breeder’s rights and trade secrets/confidential information. Recognised as a Rising Star in IP by the Legal 500 Asia Pacific (2021-2024), Chantal has previously worked for international and top tier law firms in Australia and the United Kingdom.

With a science degree specialising in molecular biology and biochemistry, Chantal’s practice focuses particularly on complex, high-value, multi-jurisdictional patent infringement and revocation proceedings for clients in the life sciences sectors.

Maliha Hoque

Maliha Hoque

Paralegal

Maliha is a Paralegal and contributing author to Pearce IP’s flagship circulars BioBlast® and BioGxPulse®.  She is currently completing her Juris Doctor at the University of Sydney.  With a background in medical science, finance and risk consulting, and an inquisitive mind, Maliha loves leaving ‘no stone unturned’ when investigating IP/legal ‘challenges’.  Maliha is interested in the intersection of law and science, and digital transformation.  She gets excited about using her science, business management, and legal skills and experience to support Pearce IP’s lawyers, attorneys and clients.

New Indication Alert: FDA approves J&J’s Stelara® (Ustekinumab) for Paediatric Crohn’s Disease

On 1 May 2026, Janssen/Johnson & Johnson (J&J) announced that, on 15 April 2026, the FDA approved Stelara® (ustekinumab) for the treatment of children two years and older with moderately to severely active Crohn’s disease.  Stelara® is now the only FDA-approved IL-12/23 antagonist and the first non-TNF biologic to treat adults and children with moderately to severely active Crohn’s disease.

The approval is based on data from the Phase 3 UNITI-Jr clinical study, a multi-centre interventional study to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and pharmacokinetics of Stelara® for the treatment of paediatric Crohn’s disease over 52 weeks.

Stelara® is facing significant competition from biosimilars globally, including in the US, following settlement agreements with Amgen (which launched its biosimilar, Wezlana®, in the US in early January 2025 through Optum Health Solution’s private label subsidiary Nuvaila), Alvotech and Teva (Selarsdi® launched on 21 February 2025), Biocon (Yesintek™ launched on 24 February 2025), Samsung Bioepis’/Sandoz’s Pyzchiva® (February 2025), Celltrion (Steqeyma® launched March 2025) and Fresenius Kabi and Formycon (Otulfi® launched March 2025).  Other ustekinumab biosimilars launched in the US include Dong A-ST/Accord’s Imuldosa® (August 2025) and Bio-Thera/Hikma’s Starjemza™ (November 2025).

CuraTeQ’s Biosimilar Bevacizumab Approved in Canada

On 1 May 2026, Aurobindo announced that its subsidiary, CuraTeQ Biologics, received Canadian approval for Bevqolva™ (bevacizumab), biosimilar to Genentech’s Avastin®.  Bevqolva™ is indicated for various cancers and is available in 100 mg and 400 mg formulations.

CuraTeQ received approval for Bevqolva™ in the UK in December 2024 and the product is currently under regulatory review in Europe.

Bevacizumab biosimilars have been approved and available in Canada for many years, including Amgen’s Mvasi® (approved April 2018), Biocon’s Abevmy® (launched May 2022), Samsung Bioepis/Organon’s Aybintio® (launched November 2022) and Celltrion’s Vegzelma™ (approval announced January 2023).

The first bevacizumab biosimilar was approved in the US in September 2017 and in Europe in January 2018.

Celltrion Submits EMA Application for Trastuzumab SC Biosimilar

On 30 April 2026, Celltrion announced that it had submitted an application to the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for Herzuma® SC/CT-P6 SC, biosimilar to Roche’s Herceptin® SC (trastuzumab hyaluronidase, marketed in the US as Herceptin Hylecta™).

The timing of the application aligns with Celltrion’s December 2025 announcement that it had been conducting clinical trials for Herzuma® SC (CT-P6 SC) since February 2025 and planned to submit applications for approvals of the Herzuma® SC formulation to domestic and foreign regulatory agencies in the first half of 2026.  According to Celltrion, following the EMA, it plans to proceed with regulatory submissions for Herzuma® SC in other major countries.

There are currently no biosimilar SC formulations of trastuzumab on the market and Celltrion considers it is well-placed to enjoy a “first mover” advantage.  In January 2026, Biocon Biologics announced that it had added a trastuzumab/hyaluronidase product, referencing Roche’s Herceptin® SC/Herceptin Hylecta™, to its biosimilar development pipeline.

Xbrane Resubmits Ranibizumab Biosimilar BLA to FDA Following CRL

On 30 April 2026, Xbrane announced that it has resubmitted its BLA for biosimilar ranibizumab to the FDA following a Complete Response Letter (CRL) received in October 2025.  In November 2025, Xbrane had indicated that it expected to resubmit its BLA in March 2026.  However, following Xbrane’s contract manufacturer receiving “further detailed feedback from the FDA”, Xbrane’s resubmission plans were delayed.

The biosimilar to Genentech’s Lucentis® is co-developed by Xbrane and STADA pursuant to a 2018 agreement, and is the subject of an exclusive licensing agreement with Valorum Biologics, which will be responsible for commercialisation in the US.

There are currently three ranibizumab biosimilars approved in the US.  The first approved was Samsung Bioepis’ Byooviz® (September 2021), followed by Sandoz’s Cimerli® (August 2022, rights acquired by Sandoz from Coherus in March 2024) and Formycon’s Nufymco® (December 2025).

Xbrane’s ranibizumab biosimilar has been approved in the EU and UK since November 2022, under the name Ximluci®.  It was launched in the EU in April 2023.

Inevitable Result and Clinical Trial Protocols

 

Date of decision: 16 March 2026
Body: Australian Patent Office
Adjudicator:
Dr C. E. Downes

Introduction

On 9 February 2024, AU Pharma Pty Ltd filed a request for re-examination of the granted claims of Grunenthal’s AU2008241013 patent relating to titration methods of tapentadol.  Tapentadol is a centrally acting analgesic known to be effective for the treatment of moderate to severe acute or chronic pain.

In Australia, re-examination is an ex-parte procedure, and as such, once AU Pharma submitted its request and supporting documents, it played no further role in the matter.  The initial re-examination request resulted in a first adverse re-examination report issuing on 26 March 2024, with a further 4 adverse re-examination reports issuing before the Commissioner advised that he intended to revoke the patent and Grunenthal requested to be heard on the matter on 20 June 2025.

Following the hearing, the Commissioner’s Delegate has determined that the majority of the claims (including claim 1) lacked novelty and inventive step in light of prior art clinical trial information.  The Delegate did, however, find claims 7 and 39 to be novel and inventive, and provided Grunenthal with a two-month deadline within which to file claim amendments based on the allowable subject matter.

Interestingly, on 17 April 2026, AU Pharma withdrew its re-examination request on the newly introduced claims, stating that AU Pharma no longer requested the Commissioner to re-examine or revoke any of the newly introduced claims of Grunenthal’s patent.

Background

The object of Grunenthal’s invention in the AU2008241013 patent was stated to be “…to improve the tolerability of tapentadol in the treatment of pain, preferably chronic pain, particularly to reduce the frequency of somnolence; one of the most frequent reported adverse events, as well as other adverse events, without diminishing the efficacy of the compound and the patient compliance”.

The invention involved initiating a treatment at low doses and successively increasing the dose according to a titration regimen.  The tolerability of tapentadol was said to be surprisingly improved by administering tapentadol according to the recited titration regimen.

Claim 1 defined the invention as follows:

Use of tapentadol for the manufacture of a medicament comprising

– a first dose of tapentadol of 50 mg ± 5% or 100 mg ± 5% to be taken twice daily (bid),

– a second dose of tapentadol to be taken twice daily (bid), wherein the second dose is calculated by increasing said first dose by 50 mg to 100 mg ± 5% or 150 mg ± 5%, respectively, and

– a third dose of tapentadol to be taken twice daily (bid), wherein the third dose is calculated by increasing said second dose by 50 mg to 150 mg ± 5% or 200 mg ± 5%, respectively

for the treatment of pain with a lower incidence of somnolence in a subject,

wherein the first dose is administered during a first administration interval of at least 1 to 3 days, the second dose is administered during a second administration interval of at least 3 to 11 days following said first administration interval, and the third dose is administered during a third administration interval of at least 3 to 14 days following said second administration interval.

Key Issues and Consideration

The key issues in consideration were novelty and inventive step.

The only prior art document under consideration was the clinical trial record, D2,  Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research & Development, L.L.C.: “A Study to Evaluate Long-Term Safety of Multiple Doses of Tapentadol (CG5503) Prolonged-Release (PR) and Oxycodone Controlled-Release (CR) in Patients With Chronic Pain”, ClinicalTrials.gov [online], NCT00361504, version 1 April 2007.  Grunenthal argued that D2 did not anticipate the claimed invention or render the claimed invention obvious on the basis that there was no teaching or suggestion in D2 of lowering the incidence of somnolence in a subject.

The Delegate, however, concluded that D2 anticipated the majority of the claims (including claim 1) on the basis that the dosage regimen of tapentadol described in D2 was generally intended to reduce the incidence of side effects.  The primary and secondary outcomes of D2 included incidence of adverse events in general, changes in laboratory measures, results of physical examinations, pain intensity and patient global impression of change over one year.  While somnolence was not explicitly listed as a specific side effect to be monitored, it would nevertheless inevitably have been captured in “incidence of adverse events”.

At [57] the Delegate stated:

there is no requirement that D2 explicitly hypothesise or test for a lower level of somnolence to provide clear and unmistakable directions to the method of claim 1. ……….the steps set out in D2 can only be carried out in a way that would fall within the scope of claim 1, including with respect to generating a lower level of somnolence.  Therefore, I must conclude that the result of treating pain with a lower level of somnolence is an inevitable result of D2.  As such it is not required to be explicitly stated that achieving a lower level of the specific side effect of somnolence is the goal for there to be anticipation of the Swiss style claims or method claims.”

In reaching this conclusion, the Delegate relied on the Full Federal Court decision in Mylan Health Pty Ltd v Sun Pharma ANZ Pty Ltd [2020] FCAFC 116 in which the Full Court stated at [104]:

“We do not accept that a documentary disclosure containing a hypothesis cannot be an anticipatory disclosure that deprives an invention of novelty.  In such a case the question, simply put, remains: what does the prior document disclose? The occasion on which, or the context in which, a particular documentary disclosure is made may well inform the interpretation of the document’s content.  But if, as a matter of interpretation, the document nonetheless discloses that which is later claimed as an invention, that disclosure will anticipate the invention and deprive it of novelty.”

The Delegate then went on to find that the claims which lacked novelty also lacked an inventive step on the basis that there was nothing inventive about carrying out methods and treatments that had already been disclosed.

Outcome and Implications

Accordingly, the majority of the claims (including claim 1) were found to lack novelty and inventive step.  The Delegate, however, did find certain claims to be allowable and provided Grunenthal with an opportunity to file claim amendments based on the allowable subject matter.

The Delegate’s decision illustrates the power of a re-examination request when there is strong prior art which can be cited against the patent.  This decision is also yet another example of prior art clinical trial information being found to anticipate the claimed invention, despite the clinical trial information not providing any scientific proof or substantiation of the results.


 

About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist, life-sciences focussed, intellectual property/law firm offering lawyers and attorneys in Australia and New Zealand.

In 2025, Pearce IP was honoured by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer as a Top Specialist Firm, 5 Star Employer of Choice, and the “Standout Winner” for Inclusion and Culture (<100 employees).  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, Best Law Firms, among others.

Pearce IP is the only leading IP firm in Australia and New Zealand with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Naomi Pearce

Naomi Pearce

CEO, Executive Lawyer (AU, NZ), Patent Attorney (AU, NZ) & Trade Mark Attorney (AU)

Naomi is the CEO and Founder of Pearce IP, and is one of ANZ’s leading IP practitioners. Naomi is a market leading, strategic, commercially astute, patent lawyer, patent attorney and trade mark attorney, with over 29 years’ experience, and a background in molecular biology/biochemistry.

Ranked in virtually every notable legal directory, highly regarded by peers and clients, Naomi is renowned for her successful and elegant IP/legal strategies focussing on complex/multijurisdictional litigation, global FTO, and strategic advice.  Among other awards, Naomi is the 2026 Lexology Client Choice Winner for Patents, the 2024 Lawyers Weekly Women in LawExecutive of the Year”, the 2023 Lawyers Weekly “IP Partner of the Year”, the 2022 Lexology Client Choice Winner for Life Sciences, the 2022 Asia Pacific Women in Business Law Patent Lawyer of the Year”, and the 2021 Lawyers Weekly Women in Law “Partner of the Year”.  Ranked in Chambers Asia Pacific, Chambers Global,  IAM Patent 1000IAM Strategy 300, is a MIP “Patent Star”, and is recognised as a WIPR Leader for patents and trade marks. 

Pearce IP is the premier life sciences focussed firm in ANZ.  Commencing in 2017. Pearce IP is the 2025 Australasian Lawyer and NZ Lawyer 5-Star Employer of Choice & “Standout Winner” for Inclusion and Culture (<100 employees).  In 2021, Pearce IP was the Lawyers Weekly Australian Law Awards IP Team of the Year.

Helen Macpherson

Helen Macpherson

Executive, Lawyer (Head of Litigation –Australia)

Helen is a highly regarded intellectual property specialist and industry leader with more than 25 years’ experience advising on patents, plant breeder’s rights, trade marks, copyright and confidential information. She is known for her expertise in complex, high-value patent matters and leverages her technical background in biochemistry and molecular biology to work across a wide range of technologies, including inorganic, organic, physical and process chemistry, biochemistry, biotechnology (including genetics, molecular biology and virology), and physics. Helen is an active member of the Intellectual Property Committee of the Law Council of Australia and the Intellectual Property Society of Australia and New Zealand.

Mathew Lucas

Mathew Lucas

Executive, Patent & Trade Mark Attorney (AU, NZ)

Mathew Lucas is an Executive Patent & Trade Mark Attorney with over 25 years’ experience in patent prosecution, oppositions, freedom-to-operate advice, litigation support, and strategic IP advice, focusing on the life sciences sector including pharma/biopharma, chemistry, materials science, diagnostics and biotechnology.  He has drafted more than 500 patent specifications across a wide range of technologies.

Mat holds a PhD in Chemistry from the University of Melbourne and completed post-doctoral research at the University of Illinois (Chicago) and the University of Adelaide in areas including radical chemistry, diagnostic technologies and therapeutic compounds.

Gedeon Richter’s Tocilizumab Biosimilar EU-Approved

On 29 April 2026, Gedeon Richter announced that the European Commission has granted marketing authorisation for Tuyory ®, biosimilar to Roche’s RoActemra® (tocilizumab).  This follows a positive opinion for Tuyory® in February 2026 from the European Medicine Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP).

Tuyory® is approved in IV and SC formulations for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA), polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis (pJIA), giant cell arthritis (GCA), cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and COVID-19.

Tuyory® was jointly developed by Gedeon Richter and Mochida Pharmaceutical, with Mochida being responsible for regulatory filings in Japan and Richter filing marketing authorisation applications in other countries.

There are 3 other tocilizumab biosimilars approved in Europe: Fresenius Kabi’s Tyenne® in both IV and SC forms (November 2023), STADA’s Tocilizumab STADA™ (previously Biogen’s Tofidence®) (June 2024) and Celltrion’s Avtozma® (February 2025).

First Generic Ozempic® (Semaglutide) Approved in Canada for Dr Reddy’s & Apotex

Following the March 2026 launch of several generic equivalents of Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic® (semaglutide) in India and the “tentative approval” of Apotex’s generic semaglutide in the US, the first semaglutide generics have now been approved in Canada.

On 29 April 2026, Dr Reddy’s Laboratories announced that it was the first company to receive approval from Health Canada for its generic semaglutide injection for the treatment of type 2 diabetes in adults.  The approval covers two formulations: 2mg/pen (1.34mg/mL) and 4mg/pen (1.34mg/mL).  While no launch date has been announced, Dr Reddy’s has “launch plans underway”.

Days later, on 1 May 2026, Apotex announced that its Apo-Semaglutide Injection™ was approved by Health Canada.  The approval covers two prefilled pen formats: 0.25 mg or 0.5 mg doses (containing 2 mg of semaglutide 0.68mg/mL) and 1 mg doses (containing 4 mg of semaglutide 1.34 mg/mL).  Apo-Semaglutide Injection™ was developed by Apotex through a strategic partnership with Orbicular Pharmaceutical Technologies, headquartered in India.

Dr Reddy’s and Apotex are active in the generic semaglutide space, with Dr Reddy’s one of the first companies to receive approval for, and launch, generic semaglutide in India (under the name Obeda™) and Apotex receiving the first US FDA Tentative Approval for its generic semaglutide ANDA, giving it an opportunity to be one of the first to launch generic Ozempic® in the US following expiry of Novo Nordisk’s exclusivity/patents.

It has previously been reported that Health Canada is reviewing numerous submissions for generic semaglutide, including applications by Teva, Aspen Pharmacare, Taro Pharmaceuticals and Sandoz (which is planning a 2026 generic semaglutide launch in Canada).  Further generic semaglutide approvals are therefore expected in Canada in the coming weeks and months.

Henlius/Organon Secure First Pertuzumab Biosimilar Approval in EU

On 29 April 2026, the European Commission approved Shanghai Henlius and Organon’s Poherdy® (pertuzumab) as the first biosimilar to Genentech/Roche’s Perjeta®.

Poherdy® is indicated for use (with trastuzumab and docetaxel) in adults with HER2-positive metastatic or locally recurrent unresectable breast cancer.  The approval follows the CHMP recommendation of 27 February 2026.

Under a June 2022 deal, Organon has exclusive global commercialisation rights for Henlius’ pertuzumab and denosumab biosimilars, “except for China; including Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan”.

Roche and Genentech settled parallel BPCIA proceedings against Shanghai Henlius and Organon relating to Poherdy® in the US in January 2026.  Poherdy® was approved by the FDA in November 2025.

Pertuzumab biosimilars have been approved in India and include Intas’ biosimilar (December 2024, subject to submission of further studies), Zydus’ Sigrima™ (June 2024, subject to ongoing litigation) and Enzene’s Pertuza®/Perzea® (launched September 2025).  In Russia, Biocad’s Pertuvia™ (May 2025) and R-Pharm’s Persinthia™ (February 2026) have been approved.  Pertuzumab biosimilars are also under development by Sandoz and EirGenix and, in February 2026, Genentech commenced US ITC proceedings against Biocon regarding its pertuzumab biosimilar, BMAB 1500.

Pearce IP BioBlast® for the week ending 24 April 2026

Pearce IP provides weekly reports on global biosimilars activities in the Pearce IP BioBlast®. Significant biosimilar activities for the week ending 24 April 2026 are set out below:


Adalimumab, Omalizumab, Ustekinumab

At the March 2026 PBAC Meeting (outcomes published on 24 April 2026), the Australian Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee (PBAC) recommended reimbursement… Read more here.

Denosumab

21 April 2026 | CA | Biocon’s Denosumab Biosimilars Approved in Canada
On 21 April 2026, Biocon announced that, on 3 April 2026, Health Canada approved Bosaya™ and Vevzuo™, biosimilars to Amgen’s Prolia® and Xgeva® (denosumab) respectively… Read more here.

Dupilumab

22 April 2026 | US | New Indication Alert: FDA Approves Regeneron/Sanofi’s Dupilumab for Children with Uncontrolled CSU
On 22 April 2026, Regeneron and Sanofi announced that Dupixent® (dupilumab) has been approved by the FDA for the treatment of children aged 2 to 11 years with chronic… Read more here.

Enfortumab vedotin

20 April 2026 | US | FDA Grants Priority Review of Pfizer/Astella’s sBLA for Enfortumab Vedotin Plus Pembrolizumab for MIBC Regardless of Cisplatin Eligibility
On 20 April 2026, Astellas Pharma and Pfizer announced that the FDA granted priority review of the sBLA for Astella Pharma/Pfizer’s Padcev™ (enfortumab vedotin-ejfv) in combination… Read more here.

Fremanezumab, Galcanezumab

On 16 April 2026, the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit published its decision in an appeal by Teva Pharmaceuticals in proceedings commenced in September 2018 alleging… Read more here.

Golimumab

On 20 April 2026, PR Newswire reported that Health Canada has approved JAMP Pharma’s Upgolyv™, biosimilar to Janssen’s Simponi® (golimumab), for the treatment of chronic… Read more here.

Obinutuzumab

21 April 2026 | US | FDA Accepts Roche’s Obinutuzumab sBLA for SLE
On 21 April 2026, Roche announced that the FDA has accepted its supplemental Biologics License Application (sBLA) for Gazyva®/Gazyvaro® (obinutuzumab) for the treatment of… Read more here.

Ranibizumab, Nivolumab, Risankizumab

On 24 April 2026, the European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) announced the outcomes of its April 2026 meeting, including positive… Read more here.

Ustekinumab

21 April 2026 | JP | Celltrion’s IV Ustekinumab Biosimilar Approved in Japan
On 21 April 2026, Celltrion announced that the intravenous (IV) formulation of Steqeyma® (ustekinumab), biosimilar to Janssen’s Stelara®, has been approved in Japan… Read more here.

Biopharma Deals

On 27 April 2026, Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Limited and Organon & Co announced that they have entered into a definitive agreement for the acquisition by Sun Pharma of all… Read more here.
 
On 22 April 2026, Amneal Pharmaceuticals and Kashiv BioSciences jointly announced that Amneal will acquire 100% of Kashiv BioSciences.  The deal (which is subject to approval… Read more here.

Biopharma News

On 27 April 2026, Samsung Bioepis published its 13th US Biosimilar Market Report, which has been released every quarter since April 2023.  The report provides an overview of the… Read more here.

 

About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist, life-sciences focussed, intellectual property/law firm offering lawyers and attorneys in Australia and New Zealand.

In 2025, Pearce IP was honoured by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer as a Top Specialist Firm, 5 Star Employer of Choice, and the “Standout Winner” for Inclusion and Culture (<100 employees).  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, Best Law Firms, among others.

Pearce IP is the only leading IP firm in Australia and New Zealand with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Naomi Pearce

Naomi Pearce

CEO, Executive Lawyer (AU, NZ), Patent Attorney (AU, NZ) & Trade Mark Attorney (AU)

Naomi is the CEO and Founder of Pearce IP, and is one of ANZ’s leading IP practitioners. Naomi is a market leading, strategic, commercially astute, patent lawyer, patent attorney and trade mark attorney, with over 29 years’ experience, and a background in molecular biology/biochemistry.

Ranked in virtually every notable legal directory, highly regarded by peers and clients, Naomi is renowned for her successful and elegant IP/legal strategies focussing on complex/multijurisdictional litigation, global FTO, and strategic advice.  Among other awards, Naomi is the 2026 Lexology Client Choice Winner for Patents, the 2024 Lawyers Weekly Women in LawExecutive of the Year”, the 2023 Lawyers Weekly “IP Partner of the Year”, the 2022 Lexology Client Choice Winner for Life Sciences, the 2022 Asia Pacific Women in Business Law Patent Lawyer of the Year”, and the 2021 Lawyers Weekly Women in Law “Partner of the Year”.  Ranked in Chambers Asia Pacific, Chambers Global,  IAM Patent 1000IAM Strategy 300, is a MIP “Patent Star”, and is recognised as a WIPR Leader for patents and trade marks. 

Pearce IP is the premier life sciences focussed firm in ANZ.  Commencing in 2017. Pearce IP is the 2025 Australasian Lawyer and NZ Lawyer 5-Star Employer of Choice & “Standout Winner” for Inclusion and Culture (<100 employees).  In 2021, Pearce IP was the Lawyers Weekly Australian Law Awards IP Team of the Year.

Chantal Savage

Chantal Savage

Special Counsel, Lawyer

Chantal is an intellectual property disputes lawyer with experience advising across the spectrum of IP rights, including patents, trade marks, copyright, plant breeder’s rights and trade secrets/confidential information. Recognised as a Rising Star in IP by the Legal 500 Asia Pacific (2021-2024), Chantal has previously worked for international and top tier law firms in Australia and the United Kingdom.

With a science degree specialising in molecular biology and biochemistry, Chantal’s practice focuses particularly on complex, high-value, multi-jurisdictional patent infringement and revocation proceedings for clients in the life sciences sectors.

Maliha Hoque

Maliha Hoque

Paralegal

Maliha is a Paralegal and contributing author to Pearce IP’s flagship circulars BioBlast® and BioGxPulse®.  She is currently completing her Juris Doctor at the University of Sydney.  With a background in medical science, finance and risk consulting, and an inquisitive mind, Maliha loves leaving ‘no stone unturned’ when investigating IP/legal ‘challenges’.  Maliha is interested in the intersection of law and science, and digital transformation.  She gets excited about using her science, business management, and legal skills and experience to support Pearce IP’s lawyers, attorneys and clients.

Celltrion First to Launch Biosimilar Tocilizumab in Japan

On 28 April 2026, Celltrion announced the launch of Avtozma®/CT-P47, biosimilar to Roche’s Actemra® (tocilizumab), in Japan.  Avtozma® is the first tocilizumab biosimilar to be launched in Japan, having also been the first to receive approval in September 2025.

Avtozma® is approved for all reference indications and will be sold in Japan by Celltrion’s Japanese subsidiary.  Avtozma® has also received marketing authorisation in a number of other regions, including the US (January 2025), and was the first tocilizumab biosimilar approved in Australia (May 2025) and New Zealand (December 2025).

There is at least one other tocilizumab biosimilar approved in Japan, with Gedeon Richter/Mochida Pharmaceutical/Ayumi Pharmaceutical’s RGB-19 (marketed as Tuyory® in the EU) approved in March 2026 in IV, SC and autoinjector formulations.

PBAC Recommends PBS Reimbursement for Biosimilars to Adalimumab (High Concentration), Omalizumab (PFP) & Ustekinumab

At the March 2026 PBAC Meeting (outcomes published on 24 April 2026), the Australian Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee (PBAC) recommended reimbursement of the following biosimilars:

  • Amgen’s Amgevita® (adalimumab) in 20mg/0.2ml and 40mg/0.4ml pre-filled syringe (PFS), and 40mg/0.4ml and 80mg/0.8ml pre-filled pen (PFP);
  • Celltrion’s Yuflyma® (adalimumab) in 20mg/0.2ml PFS;
  • Celltrion’s Omlyclo® (omalizumab) in 75mg/0.5ml and 150mg/1ml PFP;
  • Sandoz’s Ardelya® (ustekinumab) in 45mg/0.5ml and 90mg/1ml PFS;
  • Amgen’s Wezlana® (ustekinumab) in 45mg/0.5ml and 90mg/1ml PFS and 130 mg in 26 mL solution for IV infusion.

Amgen’s high concentration adalimumab biosimilar, Amgevita®, was TGA-approved in September 2025, while Celltrion’s high concentration adalimumab Yuflyma® was TGA-approved in September 2024, June 2023 and March 2022 as 20mg/0.2ml PFS, 80mg/0.8ml and 40mg/0.4ml, respectively.  Yuflyma® was first PBS-listed in March 2023 (40mg/0.4ml).  There are a number of other high concentration biosimilars to AbbVie’s Humira® approved in Australia, including Samsung Bioepis’ Hadlima® (approved February 2023, PBS-listed by Organon October 2024) and Sandoz’s Hyrimoz® (approved May 2024 and PBS-listed January 2025).

Celltrion’s Omlyclo® (omalizumab), biosimilar to Genentech/Novartis’ Xolair®, was previously PBS-listed on 1 August 2025 (in 75 mg/0.5ml and 150 mg/1ml PFS) and was launched in Australia in September 2025.  The March 2026 PBAC recommendation relates to the pre-filled pen presentation, which was TGA approved in August 2025.

Amgen’s Wezlana® (ustekinumab), biosimilar to Janssen’s Stelara®, was first recommended for PBS listing at PBAC’s April 2024 meeting.  However, Amgen did not proceed with the listing at that time and requested PBS listing of Wezlana® be put back on the agenda at the March 2026 PBAC meeting.  PBAC has extended its March 2024 recommendation for a further 12 months, supporting the PBS listing of Wezlana®.

Sandoz’s Ardelya® (ustekinumab) has also been recommended for PBS listing but is yet to receive marketing approval in Australia.

Celltrion’s Steqeyma® was the first ustekinumab biosimilar to be PBS-listed on 1 August 2025.  Samsung Bioepis’ Epyztek® (ustekinumab) was recommended for PBS listing at PBAC’s March 2025 meeting, but has not yet progressed to PBS listing, pending lodgement of required documentation.

FDA Grants Priority Review to sBLA for Jazz Pharma/BeOne’s Zanidatamab/Tislelizumab Combo in First-Line HER2+ GEA

On 27 April 2026, Jazz Pharmaceuticals announced that the FDA accepted for priority review a supplemental Biologics License Application (sBLA) for Ziihera® (zanidatamab-hrii) in combination with BeOne’s (formerly BeiGene’s) Tevimbra® (tislelizumab) and chemotherapy for the first-line treatment of adult patients with HER2+ advanced or metastatic gastric, gastroesophageal junction (GEJ), or gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma (GEA).

The sBLA is being reviewed under the FDA’s Real-Time Oncology Review (RTOR) program, which facilitates earlier submission of topline efficacy and safety results, prior to the submission of the complete application, to support an earlier start to the FDA’s evaluation of the application.  The FDA has set a target action date under the Prescription Drug Fee Act (PDUFA) of 25 August 2026.

The sBLA was based on positive safety and efficacy results from the global, randomised Phase III HERIZON-GEA-01 trial, which evaluated the efficacy and safety of Ziihera® in combination with standard-of-care chemotherapy with or without Tevimbra® in patients with advanced or metastatic GEA, including gastric, GEJ and oesophageal adenocarcinomas.

Jazz Pharmaceuticals also announced on 27 April 2026 that the FDA has granted Breakthrough Therapy designation to zanidatamab in combination with fluoropyrimidine- and platinum-containing chemotherapy, with or without tislelizumab, for the first-line treatment of patients with HER2+ unresectable locally advanced or metastatic gastric, GEJ, or oesophageal adenocarcinoma.

Zanidatamab is being developed by Jazz and BeOne under licence agreements from Zymeworks, which first developed the molecule.  Jazz has rights to zanidatamab in all regions except Asia (excluding India and Japan), Australia and New Zealand, for which BeOne has the rights.

Samsung Bioepis’ Q2/2026 US Biosimilar Market Report Published – Market Shares of Adalimumab & Ustekinumab Biosimilars at 60% & 27%

On 27 April 2026, Samsung Bioepis published its 13th US Biosimilar Market Report, which has been released every quarter since April 2023.  The report provides an overview of the US biosimilar market and details average sales price (ASP) and wholesale acquisition cost (WAC) information for commercially available biosimilars in the US.

The Q2/2026 edition reports that, as of March 2026, the FDA has approved 92 biosimilars across 20 unique biosimilar molecules, 67 of which have been launched in the US.  This is an additional 2 biosimilars approved and 3 launched since Q1/2026.  The biosimilars FDA approved in Q1/2026 were Accord Biopharma’s Filkri™ (filgrastim) (referencing Amgen’s Neupogen®) and Teva Pharmaceutical’s Ponlimsi™ (denosumab) (referencing Amgen’s Prolia®)  The Q1/2026 launches were Samsung Bioepis’ Ospomyv® (denosumab) (referencing Amgen’s Prolia®) and Gedeon Richter/Hikma’s Enoby® and Xtrenbo® (denosumab) (referencing Amgen’s Prolia® and Xgeva®, respectively).

Samsung Bioepis reports as “key highlights” increases in US market share of adalimumab biosimilars (to 60% as of February 2026), and ustekinumab biosimilars (an increase of 8% to 27% as of Q4/2025).  The increase in adalimumab biosimilar adoption is said to reflect the inclusion of Quallent private label sales in market share calculations beginning in 2026.

The Biosimilar Market Report summarises the FDA’s October 2025 and March 2026 draft guidance regarding streamlining biosimilar development, including by indicating that Clinical Efficacy Studies (CES) are no longer expected by default and clarifying that clinical data generated using a non-US-licensed comparator product may be used to support a US biosimilar application, provided sufficient scientific justification is established.  The Report concludes that reduced reliance on CES and increased flexibility in comparator sourcing “may lower development cost and complexity” and “may enable development across a broad set of reference products particularly in later-wave or smaller markets”.  However, the Report refers to market research suggesting that reduced reliance on CES is unlikely to materially impact coverage or formulary positioning, as FDA approval is viewed as the threshold for equivalence.

Sun Pharma to Acquire Organon in US$11.75B Deal

On 27 April 2026, Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Limited and Organon & Co announced that they have entered into a definitive agreement for the acquisition by Sun Pharma of all outstanding shares of Organon in an all-cash transaction valued at US$11.75 billion.

The transaction is expected to close in early 2027, subject to closing conditions including regulatory approvals and Organon stockholder approval.  The transaction will be “effected by a merger of Organon with a subsidiary of Sun Pharma, with Organon surviving the merger”.

According to the companies, the acquisition of Organon will result in Sun Pharma being among the top 25 global pharmaceutical companies with combined revenue of US$12.4 billion and will enable Sun Pharma’s entry into biosimilars as a “Top 10 global player”.

Biosimilars in Organon’s portfolio include Brenzys® (etanercept), Hadlima® (adalimumab) and Renflexis® (infliximab).  Organon also has exclusive global commercialisation rights to Bilprevda® and Bildyos®/Tuzemty® (HLX14), biosimilars to Amgen’s Prolia® and Xgeva® (denosumab), and Poherdy® (HLX11), biosimilar to Genentech/Roche’s Perjeta® (pertuzumab), for all countries except China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan, under a June 2022 licence agreement between Organon and Shanghai Henlius Biotech.  Bilprevda® and Bildyos® have been approved in the US (September 2025), EU (September 2025), and Canada (March 2026).  Poherdy® was approved by the FDA in November 2025 and received a positive CHMP opinion in early 2026.

In March 2026, Sun Pharma launched its generic semaglutide products, Noveltreat™ and Sematrinity™ (semaglutide), in India.  The products are indicated for chronic weight management and type 2 diabetes mellitus, respectively.

Positive CHMP Opinions for Intas’ Biosimilar Ranibizumab, Extended Indications for BMS’ Nivolumab & AbbVie’s Risankizumab

On 24 April 2026, the European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) announced the outcomes of its April 2026 meeting, including positive opinions for one biosimilar and for extended indications of 9 already approved medicines.

Intas’ Rexatilux® (ranibizumab), biosimilar to Genentech’s Lucentis®, was the only biosimilar to receive a positive CHMP opinion in April.  It will join a number of ranibizumab biosimilars approved and launched in Europe, including Samsung Bioepis’ Byooviz® (approved August 2021 in vial form and commercially available in several European countries since March 2023), STADA/Xbrane’s Ximluci® (launched in the EU in April 2023, following November 2022 approval), Formycon’s Ranivisio® (approved August 2022, being commercialised in the EU by Teva), and Sandoz/Lupin’s Ranluspec® (approved February 2026, with planned EU launch in the second half of 2026).

CHMP positive opinions for extended indications include the following for BMS’ Opdivo® (nivolumab): in combination with doxorubicin, vinblastine and dacarbazine (AVD) for adults and adolescents 12 years of age and older with previously untreated Stage III or IV classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL).  The same indication was approved by the FDA in March 2026.  BMS also added a cHL indication to its European registration in March 2026, with approval for nivolumab in combination with brentuximab vedotin for the treatment of relapsed or refractory cHL after one prior line of therapy.  A number of nivolumab biosimilars are under development including Sandoz’s JPB898, Xbrane/Intas’ Xdivane™Amgen’s ABP 206Reliance Life Sciences’ RLS-NivolumabEnzene’s candidateBoan Biotech’s BA1104NeuClone’s candidate and Zydus’ ZRCr-4276.

AbbVie’s Skyrizi® (risankizumab) also secured a positive recommendation for an extended indication, in respect of paediatric plaque psoriasis.  The last indication approved for Skyrizi® in Europe was in July 2024, with ulcerative colitis being added to adult plaque psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis and moderate to severe Crohn’s disease.  There have not been any announcements of any significant biosimilar risankizumab development.

Amneal Plans 12+ Commercial Biosimilars by 2030 Including Pembrolizumab, Nivolumab, Abatacept & Certolizumab

During its investor call on 22 April 2026, Amneal confirmed that, following its acquisition of Kashiv Biosciences, it is expecting to have 6 biosimilars launched in the US by 2027.  This includes:

Amneal is also expecting approvals for 6+ advanced pipeline biosimilar products in 2028-2030, including abatacept (referencing BMS’ Orencia®) certolizumab (UCB’s Cimzia®), pembrolizumab (MSD’s Keytruda®), nivolumab (BMS’ Opdivo®) and dulaglutide (Eli Lilly’s Trulicity®).

In 2030+, Amneal is planning for 10+ pipeline products to be approved, including biosimilars of dupilumab (referencing Regeneron/Sanofi’s Dupixent®), risankizumab (referencing AbbVie’s Skyrizi®) and guselkumab (referencing Janssen’s Tremfya®).

Amneal presently intends to commercialise the biosimilars itself in the US and India, with a partnership model being employed in the rest of the world.

Enzene’s Revised Ph 3 Biosimilar Pembrolizumab Trial Recommended in India

At its meeting on 22 April 2026, the Subject Expert Committee (SEC) under India’s Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO) recommended approval of Enzene’s Phase 3 clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy, safety, pharmacokinetics and immunogenicity of biosimilar pembrolizumab in comparison with MSD’s Keytruda® (pembrolizumab) in combination with pemetrexed and platinum based chemotherapy in adult patients with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer.

The clinical trial protocol was revised after the SEC instructed Enzene to make changes to the protocol in December 2025, including as to its primary endpoint, non-inferiority margin used for sample size calculation, length of safety assessment and clinical trial sites.

Pembrolizumab biosimilars have reportedly been launched in Paraguay (by Bioeticos in August 2025) and approved in Vietnam (by Biocad in November 2025).  Pembrolizumab biosimilars are also under development including by Samsung Bioepis, Amgen, mAbxience, Sandoz, Celltrion, Bio-Thera, BioNTech, Alvotech, Formycon and Amneal/Kashiv.

A Litany of Errors… and Cipla’s Patent Reinstated

 

Date of decision:  20 February 2026
Body: Australian Patent Office
Adjudicator:
Greg Powell

Introduction

Cipla has defeated Teva’s and Bayer’s oppositions to its application for an extension of time in which to pay the renewal fee on AU2003244799 for a combination of azelastine and steroids (the Cipla Patent). This combination is used in the hay fever medication Dymista®, distributed by Alphapharm/Viatris in Australia.  The Delegate’s decision provides a textbook application of the principles underpinning an application for an extension of time, with Cipla providing sufficient evidence to prove the likely errors which caused the failure to pay the renewal fee and why the Delegate should exercise his discretion to grant the requested extension of time.  Following the decision, the Cipla Patent has been reinstated as granted on the Australian Patents Register.

We will watch with interest what happens next with the Cipla Patent.  The Cipla Patent, which contains only formulation, use and method claims, is in its extended term, having been extended before the recent Full Federal Court Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co Lt v Sun Pharma ANZ Pty Ltd decision  in which the Full Court held that only patents with API claims were eligible for extension under the Australian pharmaceutical patent term extension regime.  The Full Court Otsuka decision is now the subject of a High Court appeal.

Background

The relevant background facts were as follows:

1.Cipla filed the application for the Cipla Patent on 13 June 2003, with the patent application proceeding to grant on 24 December 2009.  On 18 August 2014, its original 20-year term was extended from 13 June 2023 to 13 June 2028.  An exclusive licence of the Cipla Patent to Meda AB was recorded on the Australian Patent Register on 18 December 2017.
2.Cipla retained AA Thornton (AAT) to manage renewal fee payments, the payment of which was outsourced to CPA.  All communications between Cipla and CPA were handled by AAT, who reported the details of IP cases in their care to CPA, sought renewal instructions from Cipla, and then provided these renewal instructions to CPA.  CPA then organised renewal fee payments based on these instructions.
3.AAT maintained the case records (including deadlines) in their records system, and details of these records were reported automatically to CPA to update CPA’s records.  Every quarter, AAT provided to the patentee a list of all upcoming renewal deadlines directly from CPA’s records.  The patentee then gave their renewal instructions back to AAT, who passed them onto CPA.
4.Where there was an extension of term of a patent, AAT recorded these in a general file which included the information on all of the extended patents in the same patent family.  As not all patents had their terms extended, the updating process involved the responsible AAT attorney providing this information to the AAT Records Department which updated a general patent term extension casefile and then provided it manually to CPA to ensure the details were captured by CPA for renewal purposes.
5.Unfortunately, this system failed when it came to the management of the Cipla Patent, with IP Australia advising the agent on record, Griffith Hack, on 3 January 2024, that the Cipla Patent had ceased for failure to pay the renewal fees by the 13 June 2023 deadline or during the 6-month grace period which ended on 13 December 2023.
6.Due to the passage of time since the term extension had been requested and granted, Cipla was not able to file evidence to prove exactly what had occurred.  AAT’s physical files relating to the Cipla Patent and its extension of term had been destroyed and it had not been possible to track down the relevant email correspondence.  That said, based on evidence from an AAT attorney, Cipla submitted that a number of errors may have occurred, including at least the following:
(a)AAT did not update its database entry for the Cipla Patent in or around September 2014 (when AAT had received notice of the extension of the patent’s term) with details of the extension of term so that the appropriate renewal reminders in the extension period would be generated in its system.
(b)AAT did not update CPA in or around September 2014 with details of the extension of term of the Cipla Patent.
(c)CPA did not update its database in or around September 2014 with details of the extension of term of the Cipla Patent so that the appropriate renewal reminders in the extension period would be generated by CPA.
(d)In each of January 2023 and April 2023, AAT compared the CPA renewal reports against the AAT records While attention was drawn to the fact that an extension of term had been granted for the Patent and that renewals should be payable, this did not lead the AAT Records Department to update the deadline in its database entry for the Cipla Patent, correct the details for the Cipla Patent with CPA and/or ensure that any upcoming renewals were paid.
7.A Cipla lawyer gave evidence that it was always Cipla’s intention to renew the Cipla Patent each year and keep it in force for its entire extended term.  The Cipla Patent was important, as it covered a product sold in Australia, had a patent term extension and had an exclusive licensee.
8.An application for an extension of time under s223(2)(a) to pay the renewal fees was filed on 25 July 2024, with Teva and Bayer filing Notices of Opposition in mid-October 2024.  Teva’s and Bayer’s oppositions were heard together, with Bayer ultimately relying on Teva’s evidence and filing no evidence of its own.

Key Issues

The Delegate was required to determine whether an extension of time application should be granted under section 223(2)(a) of the Patents Act. Section 223(2)(a) provides that:

“(2) Where, because of:

(a) an error or omission by the person concerned or by his or her agent or attorney; or

(b)…

a relevant act that is required to be done within a certain time is not, or cannot be, done within that time, the Commissioner may, on application made by the person concerned in accordance with the regulations, extend the time for doing the act.” (emphasis added)

Accordingly, the Delegate was required to determine whether:

  • Cipla’s evidence proved that it had an intention to pay the renewal fees within the prescribed time and that an error or omission had contributed to its failure to do so.  Importantly, the failure to pay the renewal fee could not be the error or omission.

Previous cases had interpreted the term “error or omission” broadly to encompass accidental slips, inadvertences and errors caused by faulty reflection; an unexpected failure to exercise due diligence and/or a flaw in mental function in carrying out an intention; and a breakdown in procedure in effecting an intention.

  • Cipla had given full and frank disclosure in its evidence of the relevant circumstances, justifying the exercise of the Delegate’s discretion in Cipla’s favour.  Relevantly, in Kimberly-Clark Ltd v Commissioner of Patents (No 3) (1988) 13 IPR 569 at 583-584 [17], the Court had stated that:

‘In order to make out the “proper case … justifying an extension” … an applicant would … have to go beyond a disclosure of the processes by which an agent’s errors came to be committed and would have to expose frankly, inter alia, all the conduct, knowledge, beliefs and mental processes of the applicant … relevant to an understanding of the way the failure to do the act or take the step occurred, or relevant to an evaluation of the reasonableness of that conduct.’

Consideration

The Delegate was satisfied that the evidence proved that Cipla had always intended to maintain the Cipla Patent and that the evidence clearly established a breakdown in procedure.  The Delegate went on to state that while there were a number of times that this breakdown could have been identified (but, somewhat surprisingly, was compounded by another error), he was satisfied that some causal error occurred resulting in the failure to pay the renewal fee within the prescribed time.

The Delegate then turned to the question of whether he should exercise his discretion in Cipla’s favour to grant the extension of time.  In answering the question of discretion, the Delegate considered the following factors:

  • Whether a proper case had been made out justifying an extension.

The Delegate concluded that Cipla had fulfilled its obligation to provide an adequate basis upon which its moral claim to an indulgence may be assessed, because it had disclosed Cipla’s state of mind, the circumstances surrounding the various errors, and the relevant internal AAT processes.

  • Whether there had been undue delay in seeking an extension of time.

Teva and Bayer argued that there had been a 6-month delay between the receipt of the ceasing letter of 3 January 2024 by Griffith Hack and the filing of the s223 request.  The Delegate did not consider this “delay” to be unreasonable or unnecessary in the circumstances of the case.  Griffith Hack had delayed sending the letter to AAT, and AAT had had not considered the letter immediately upon receipt.They mistakenly believed that the patent had expired.  Indeed, Cipla had filed its extension of time application the day after it had become aware of the patent ceasing.

  • The interests of the parties in refusing or granting an extension.

The Delegate considered the interests of the parties to be “offsetting”.  While Cipla’s and Meda’s interests resided in the restoration of the patent monopoly, Teva’s and Bayer’s interests resided with the refusal of an extension of time as such an extension would impede their ability to produce and supply their own equivalent products within Australia.  However, to the extent that Teva or Bayer might already have taken steps to exploit the patented invention in Australia, the compensatory provisions contained in s223(9) were available to mitigate any resulting prejudice.

  • The public interest.

The Delegate considered that, on balance, the public interest was neutral to the grant of the extension.  While there was a public interest in certainty as to the status of a patent and the accuracy of the Register, there was also a broad public interest in promotion of innovation through the reward of patent rights and the extension of these patent rights pursuant to the pharmaceutical patent term extension regime.

Outcome

The Delegate was satisfied that, on balance, Cipla always had an intention to maintain the Cipla Patent, some causal error occurred thwarting the patentee’s intention to maintain the patent, and that, as a result of the error, the relevant act was not done in time. The Delegate was also satisfied that he should exercise his discretion in Cipla’s favour to grant the extension of time.  Given this decision, the Delegate awarded costs against Teva and Bayer.


 

About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist, life-sciences focussed, intellectual property/law firm offering lawyers and attorneys in Australia and New Zealand.

In 2025, Pearce IP was honoured by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer as a Top Specialist Firm, 5 Star Employer of Choice, and the “Standout Winner” for Inclusion and Culture (<100 employees).  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, Best Law Firms, among others.

Pearce IP is the only leading IP firm in Australia and New Zealand with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Naomi Pearce

Naomi Pearce

CEO, Executive Lawyer (AU, NZ), Patent Attorney (AU, NZ) & Trade Mark Attorney (AU)

Naomi is the CEO and Founder of Pearce IP, and is one of ANZ’s leading IP practitioners. Naomi is a market leading, strategic, commercially astute, patent lawyer, patent attorney and trade mark attorney, with over 29 years’ experience, and a background in molecular biology/biochemistry.

Ranked in virtually every notable legal directory, highly regarded by peers and clients, Naomi is renowned for her successful and elegant IP/legal strategies focussing on complex/multijurisdictional litigation, global FTO, and strategic advice.  Among other awards, Naomi is the 2026 Lexology Client Choice Winner for Patents, the 2024 Lawyers Weekly Women in LawExecutive of the Year”, the 2023 Lawyers Weekly “IP Partner of the Year”, the 2022 Lexology Client Choice Winner for Life Sciences, the 2022 Asia Pacific Women in Business Law Patent Lawyer of the Year”, and the 2021 Lawyers Weekly Women in Law “Partner of the Year”.  Ranked in Chambers Asia Pacific, Chambers Global,  IAM Patent 1000IAM Strategy 300, is a MIP “Patent Star”, and is recognised as a WIPR Leader for patents and trade marks. 

Pearce IP is the premier life sciences focussed firm in ANZ.  Commencing in 2017. Pearce IP is the 2025 Australasian Lawyer and NZ Lawyer 5-Star Employer of Choice & “Standout Winner” for Inclusion and Culture (<100 employees).  In 2021, Pearce IP was the Lawyers Weekly Australian Law Awards IP Team of the Year.

Helen Macpherson

Helen Macpherson

Executive, Lawyer (Head of Litigation –Australia)

Helen is a highly regarded intellectual property specialist and industry leader with more than 25 years’ experience advising on patents, plant breeder’s rights, trade marks, copyright and confidential information. She is known for her expertise in complex, high-value patent matters and leverages her technical background in biochemistry and molecular biology to work across a wide range of technologies, including inorganic, organic, physical and process chemistry, biochemistry, biotechnology (including genetics, molecular biology and virology), and physics. Helen is an active member of the Intellectual Property Committee of the Law Council of Australia and the Intellectual Property Society of Australia and New Zealand.

Paul Johns

Paul Johns

Executive, Lawyer (Head of Litigation – New Zealand)

Paul is an intellectual property dispute resolution specialist with more than 24 years of experience across New Zealand and the UK. Paul is a seasoned lawyer, IP strategist, and Head of Pearce IP’s litigation team in New Zealand.  Paul appears in cases before the New Zealand Court of Appeal and High Court of New Zealand, as well as the New Zealand Intellectual Property Office and IP Australia

Paul is experienced in managing contentious disputes regarding all types of intellectual property and related issues, including patents, copyright, trade marks, designs, confidential information and consumer law. With a background in molecular genetics, Paul has acted for clients across a vast range of industries, including pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, animal health, med-tech, food & beverage technologies, heavy vehicle engineering, fashion, hospitality, and entertainment. Paul is recommended for litigation in the IAM Patent 1000, rated for enforcement and litigation in the WTR1000, ranked for Intellectual Property Asia-Pacific in Chambers, and recognised for Intellectual Property and Litigation in Best Lawyers.

Amneal Pharmaceuticals to Acquire Kashiv BioSciences in H2/2026

On 22 April 2026, Amneal Pharmaceuticals and Kashiv BioSciences jointly announced that Amneal will acquire 100% of Kashiv BioSciences.  The deal (which is subject to approval by Amneal shareholders and regulatory authorities) is expected to close in the second half of 2026.

The acquisition includes a USD $375 million cash transaction and USD $375 million in equity payable at closing, with up to USD $350 million based on achievement of certain regulatory milestones, potential royalties based on commercial milestones, and funding of operations through closing.

The acquisition will combine Kashiv’s expertise in biosimilar development and manufacturing with Amneal’s scale and commercialisation capabilities.  Kashiv and Amneal have previously entered strategic partnerships in relation to biosimilars in the US, including Fylnetra™ (biosimilar pegfilgrastim) in May 2022 and ADL018 (biosimilar omalizumab) in 2024.

In addition to Fylnetra™ and ADL018, Kashiv’s biosimilar pipeline includes Releuko™ (filgrastim-ayow) (FDA-approved March 2022), abatacept/KSHB002 (in clinical trials), certolizumab pegol and nivolumab (pre-clinical) and pembrolizumab (cell line and process development).  Amneal’s biosimilar pipeline includes Alymsys® (bevacizumab) (FDA approved April 2022).  Amneal also holds the exclusive US rights to mAbxience’s Boncresa™ and Oziltus™ (MB09), biosimilars to Amgen’s Prolia® and Xgeva® (denosumab) respectively (FDA approved December 2025).

New Indication Alert: FDA Approves Regeneron/Sanofi’s Dupilumab for Children with Uncontrolled CSU

On 22 April 2026, Regeneron and Sanofi announced that Dupixent® (dupilumab) has been approved by the FDA for the treatment of children aged 2 to 11 years with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) and inadequate response to histamine-1 antihistamine (H1AH) treatment.  This approval is the fifth indication of Dupixent® for young children in the US and follows EU approval for the same indication earlier this month.

Biosimilar dupilumab is under development by at least Samsung BioepisBio-Thera Solutions and Costa Rican-based SteinCaresAlvotech and Advanz and Binnopharm and Mabwell.  In August 2025, CSPC Pharmaceutical announced that it received approval from China’s National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) to conduct clinical trials of its dupilumab injection.  In January 2026, Chong Kun Dang received approval from the EMA and UK MHRA for its phase 1 clinical trial protocol for CKD-706 (dupilumab).

Reimbursement Recommendation in Canada for Opdivo® plus Yervoy® for MSI-H/dMMR Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

On 17 December 2025, Bristol Myers Squibb announced that Canada’s Drug Agency (CDA-AMC) has issued a positive reimbursement recommendation for Opdivo® (nivolumab) in combination with Yervoy® (ipilimumab) for the first-line treatment of adult patients with unresectable or metastatic microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) or mismatch repair deficient (dMMR) colorectal cancer (CRC) who meet certain criteria.

The combination of Opdivo® plus Yervoy® has been approved for a range of cancer treatments including for:

A number of nivolumab biosimilars are under development including Xbrane/Intas’ Xdivane™Amgen’s ABP 206Reliance Life Sciences’ RLS-NivolumabEnzene’s candidateBoan Biotech’s BA1104NeuClone’s candidate and Zydus’ ZRCr-4276.  In August 2025, Sandoz wound down its Phase III trial of JPB898 as a measure to streamline its biosimilar nivolumab development program following feedback from regulatory authorities regarding requirements for biosimilar approvals.

Pearce IP BioBlast® for the week ending 17 April 2026

Pearce IP provides weekly reports on global biosimilars activities in the Pearce IP BioBlast®. Significant biosimilar activities for the week ending 17 April 2026 are set out below:


Aflibercept

On 2 April 2026, Biocon filed a petition for post grant review (PGR) of Regeneron’s patent US12168036 entitled “Methods for Treating Angiogenic Eye Disorders with High Doses… Read more here.

Cetuximab

14 April 2026 | CN | Henlius’ Cetuximab Biosimilar IND Application Approved in China
On 14 April 2026, Shanghai Henlius Biotech announced that China’s National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) has approved an Investigational New Drug (IND) application… Read more here.

Denosumab

17 April 2026 | Samsung Bioepis Showcases Strong Patient Subgroup Consistency for Biosimilar Denosumab
On 17 April 2026, Samsung Bioepis announced new clinical data reinforcing the efficacy of its denosumab biosimilar, SB16 (Obodence®, referred to in the US as Ospomyv®), and… Read more here.

15 & 16 April 2026 | CN | MY | Mabwell Secures Expanded Indication in China & Licensing Deal in Malaysia for Denosumab Biosimilars
On 15 April 2026, Mabwell announced that China’s National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) has approved the supplemental Biologics Licence Application for Maiweijian™… Read more here.

Ifinatamab deruxtecan

13 April 2026 | US | Daiichi Sankyo/MSD’s Ifinatamab Deruxtecan Granted FDA Priority Review
On 13 April 2026, Daiichi Sankyo announced that the FDA has accepted for priority review a Biologics License Application (BLA) for Daiichi Sankyo/MSD’s ifinatamab deruxtecan (I-DXd)… Read more here.

Trastuzumab pamirtecan

9 & 11 April 2026 | BioNTech and DualityBio Report Phase 2 Success as Trastuzumab Pamirtecan BLA Advances in China
On 11 April 2026, BioNTech reported positive results for BioNTech and DualityBio’s investigational antibody drug conjugate, BNT323/DB-1303 (trastuzumab pamirtecan) in a Phase 2… Read more here.

Ustekinumab

On 14 April 2026, the US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit published its judgment confirming the District Court’s decision to refuse to grant a preliminary injunction to prevent… Read more here.

 

About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist, life-sciences focussed, intellectual property/law firm offering lawyers and attorneys in Australia and New Zealand.

In 2025, Pearce IP was honoured by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer as a Top Specialist Firm, 5 Star Employer of Choice, and the “Standout Winner” for Inclusion and Culture (<100 employees).  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, Best Law Firms, among others.

Pearce IP is the only leading IP firm in Australia and New Zealand with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Naomi Pearce

Naomi Pearce

CEO, Executive Lawyer (AU, NZ), Patent Attorney (AU, NZ) & Trade Mark Attorney (AU)

Naomi is the CEO and Founder of Pearce IP, and is one of ANZ’s leading IP practitioners. Naomi is a market leading, strategic, commercially astute, patent lawyer, patent attorney and trade mark attorney, with over 29 years’ experience, and a background in molecular biology/biochemistry.

Ranked in virtually every notable legal directory, highly regarded by peers and clients, Naomi is renowned for her successful and elegant IP/legal strategies focussing on complex/multijurisdictional litigation, global FTO, and strategic advice.  Among other awards, Naomi is the 2026 Lexology Client Choice Winner for Patents, the 2024 Lawyers Weekly Women in LawExecutive of the Year”, the 2023 Lawyers Weekly “IP Partner of the Year”, the 2022 Lexology Client Choice Winner for Life Sciences, the 2022 Asia Pacific Women in Business Law Patent Lawyer of the Year”, and the 2021 Lawyers Weekly Women in Law “Partner of the Year”.  Ranked in Chambers Asia Pacific, Chambers Global,  IAM Patent 1000IAM Strategy 300, is a MIP “Patent Star”, and is recognised as a WIPR Leader for patents and trade marks. 

Pearce IP is the premier life sciences focussed firm in ANZ.  Commencing in 2017. Pearce IP is the 2025 Australasian Lawyer and NZ Lawyer 5-Star Employer of Choice & “Standout Winner” for Inclusion and Culture (<100 employees).  In 2021, Pearce IP was the Lawyers Weekly Australian Law Awards IP Team of the Year.

Chantal Savage

Chantal Savage

Special Counsel, Lawyer

Chantal is an intellectual property disputes lawyer with experience advising across the spectrum of IP rights, including patents, trade marks, copyright, plant breeder’s rights and trade secrets/confidential information. Recognised as a Rising Star in IP by the Legal 500 Asia Pacific (2021-2024), Chantal has previously worked for international and top tier law firms in Australia and the United Kingdom.

With a science degree specialising in molecular biology and biochemistry, Chantal’s practice focuses particularly on complex, high-value, multi-jurisdictional patent infringement and revocation proceedings for clients in the life sciences sectors.

Maliha Hoque

Maliha Hoque

Paralegal

Maliha is a Paralegal and contributing author to Pearce IP’s flagship circulars BioBlast® and BioGxPulse®.  She is currently completing her Juris Doctor at the University of Sydney.  With a background in medical science, finance and risk consulting, and an inquisitive mind, Maliha loves leaving ‘no stone unturned’ when investigating IP/legal ‘challenges’.  Maliha is interested in the intersection of law and science, and digital transformation.  She gets excited about using her science, business management, and legal skills and experience to support Pearce IP’s lawyers, attorneys and clients.

Celltrion’s IV Ustekinumab Biosimilar Approved in Japan

On 21 April 2026, Celltrion announced that the intravenous (IV) formulation of Steqeyma® (ustekinumab), biosimilar to Janssen’s Stelara®, has been approved in Japan.  The newly approved formulation adds to Celltrion’s subcutaneous (SC) formulation of Steqeyma®, which was launched in Japan in July 2025 following its March 2025 approval.

Both formulations of Steqeyma® are approved in Japan for psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis, with the IV formulation additionally approved for Crohn’s Disease.

Celltrion’s SC formulation of Steqeyma® was the third ustekinumab biosimilar launched in Japan, following Alvotech/Fuji Pharma’s launch of AVT04 in May 2024 and Biocon/Yoshindo’s Ustekinumab BS Subcutaneous Injection, launched in May 2025.  Samsung Bioepis received Japanese approval for its ustekinumab biosimilar, Nipro™, in December 2025.

Steqeyma® has been launched around the world including in the US (March 2025), Europe (November 2024), and Australia (listed on the PBS from 1 August 2025).

BioBlast® Editor and Contributing Author

Naomi Pearce & Emily Bristow

Naomi Pearce & Emily Bristow

Editor: Naomi Pearce, Executive Lawyer, Patent Attorney & Trade Mark Attorney
Contributing Author: Emily Bristow, Law Graduate

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