Me-too drug


The term "me-too drug" or "follow-on drug" refers to a medication that is similar to a pre-existing drug, usually by making minor modifications to the prototype, reflected in slight changes in the profiles of side effects or activity, and used to treat conditions for which drugs already exist. While pharmaceutical companies have justified the development of me-toos as offering improvements in efficacy, side-effects, compliance and cost, critics have questioned the increasing marketing of me-toos, their absorption of research and development resources and their impact on the innovation of new treatments.
The term is derived from the phrase "" and is usually used in a negative way with the implication that the me-too drug is simply exploiting the research and development done to develop the prototype active pharmaceutical ingredient. However, me-too drugs can be novel compounds themselves, and drug products containing them can serve to increase market competition and thus to reduce drug prices.

History

The term "me‐too drugs" was coined in the 1950s. In 1956, Louis S. Goodman, co‐editor of Goodman and Gilman, referred to “the problem of the introduction of ‘me too’ drugs, that is, drugs without signal advantage of any sort”. Once a new drug class was discovered, other major drug companies made efforts to produce their own similar versions. Pharmacologist Milton Silverman and physician Philip R. Lee noted "the great drug therapy era was marked not only by the introduction of new drugs in great profusion and by the launching of large promotional campaigns but also by the introduction of what are known as 'duplicative' or 'me-too' products".
Between 1960 and 1962, Estes Kefauver, then Senator of Tennessee, led a series of hearings enquiring about the pharmaceutical industry's motive to produce me-too drugs after it was noted that much of their time and resources were spent producing them. Subsequently, the FDA required drug companies to prove their drugs were safe and effective. In 1964, Louis Lasagna described me-too drugs as being “hard to justify putting into man at all, let alone on the market”. Three years later, the term appeared in the Oxford English Dictionary. In the early 1970s, Silverman and Lee reported that there were almost 100 tranquillisers, 130 antihistamines, greater than 270 antibiotics and more than 200 sulfonamides.
In 1994, Desmond Laurence's textbook Clinical Pharmacology referred to me-too as "me-again".

Definition

There is no agreed definition, however, several have been proposed, including:
Biosimilars are compared with other biosimilars and are therefore not me-toos.

Examples

Me-too drugs include diazepam, propranolol, ranitidine and esketamine.

Beta blockers

The first-in-class β-blocker pronethalol was developed by James Black at ICI Pharmaceuticals. It was followed by propranolol, sotalol, practolol, metoprolol, labetalol, acebutolol and bisoprolol. Successive differences between β-blockers have had a combined cumulative effect and are seen as "innovative".

Benzodiazepines

15 benzodiazepines were marketed in the UK between 1960 and 1982, of which seven were produced by Roche.

Proton pump inhibitors

The proton-pump inhibitor Nexium by AstraZeneca is a me-too which was granted its patent by showing that it was effective for heartburn, not that it was better than its precursor, prilosec. It was shown to preserve revenues of prilosec, whose U.S. patent expired in 2001. Considered a new drug by the FDA, nexium was patented separately, sold for eight times the cost of its generic esomeprazole and advertised as significantly better than its predecessor, a move the company received much criticism for, with a subsequent class action lawsuit filed against them.
File:Nexium.jpg|Nexium

H2 antagonists

Both tagamet's and zantac's prices increased following the arrival further me-too drugs pepcid and axid.

ACE inhibitors

Several me-toos followed the prototype of the ace inhibitor, captopril, with enalapril being its first me-too. Most were as efficient as each other and had similar adverse effect profiles.

Statins

When Merck's cholesterol-lowering statin mevacor was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 1987, the understanding of the link between cholesterol and heart disease was improving, and the potential market for the drug became significant. Subsequently, several other companies developed similar drugs: Merck produced zocor and crestor, Pfizer made lipitor, Bristol-Myers Squibb produced pravachol, and Novartis developed lescol. Others include pitavastatin.
File:Atorvastatin40mg.jpg|Lipitor
File:Crestor Tablets.jpg|Crestor

Antidepressants

was the first-in-class of the tricyclic antidepressants. Amitriptyline, Nortriptyline, Dosulepin and Doxepin are some of the me-toos that followed.
Several me-too Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors have been developed for maintenance treatment in chronic depression. These include paxil, celexa, zoloft, lexapro and prozac.

File:Lexapro pills.jpg|Lexapro
File:Zoloft 100 mg.jpg|thumb|Zoloft
File:Paxil, June 2003.jpg|Paxil

Debate

In 2005, a report by the International Policy Network defended me-toos, describing their development as "incremental improvements on already existing drugs". The report stated:
... this often represent advances in safety and efficacy, along with providing new formulations and dosing options that significantly increase patient compliance. From an economic standpoint, expanding drug classes represent the possibility of lower drug prices as competition between manufacturers is increased. Additionally, pharmaceutical companies depend on incremental innovations to provide the revenue that will support the development of more risky “block-buster” drugs. Policies aimed at curbing incremental innovation will ultimately lead to a reduction in the overall quality of existing drug classes and may ultimately curb the creation of novel drugs.

This incremental innovation has led to some referring to me-toos as "me-betters".
Many physicians are unaware that me-toos are compared to placebos rather than pre-existing drugs. Me-toos are seen as patentable new drugs and therefore substantial profit makers, where innovative drugs may be more risky to develop.

Statistics

Between 1998 and 2003, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved 487 drugs, of which 78 per cent appeared to have similar characteristics to pre-existing marketed drugs.
More than 60% of medicines listed on the World Health Organization's essential list are me‐too drugs.
In September 2019, half of antibiotics under clinical development were “me-too” drugs. At the beginning of 2020, the WHO stated that only two of the 50 antibiotics in clinical development are active against serious drug resistant gram-negative bacteria, and most are not significant "upgrades" of drugs.