As previously reported, Health Canada conducted stakeholder consultations and analysis of issues related to the naming of biologic drugs, including biosimilars. On February 14, 2019, Health Canada announced its Policy Statement on the Naming of Biologic Drugs, which states that “biologic drugs, including biosimilars, will be identified by their unique brand name and non-proprietary (common) name, without the addition of a product-specific suffix” (currently used in the United States). Further, both the brand and non-proprietary names should be used throughout the medication use process to allow biologics that share the same non-proprietary name to be distinguished by their unique brand names. To implement this naming convention, Health Canada will: (i) update related guidance/amend the regulations; (ii) communicate with stakeholders on the importance of recording both brand and non-proprietary names throughout the medication use process; and (iii) undertake activities to assist pharmacovigilance, including updating ADR reporting forms. Health Canada also published a “What We Heard Report” summarizing stakeholder comments made during the consultation.
Related Publications & Articles
-
Health Canada consultation on revised biosimilar guidance: no requirement for comparative clinical efficacy and safety trials
On June 10, 2025, Health Canada launched a consultation on its Draft Guidance Document: Information and Submission Requirements for Biosimilar Biologic Drugs which includes numerous proposed revisions...Read More -
Update on biosimilars in Canada – June 2025
This article provides an update on developments in the biosimilar space in Canada—regulatory, approvals, pending submissions, litigation, and market access.Read More -
Health Canada must redetermine exemption requests for psilocybin (magic mushroom)-assisted psychotherapy training
TheraPsil, a patient advocacy organization, and 73 healthcare practitioners (HCPs) have succeeded in the Federal Court of Appeal to overturn the refusal of the Minister of Mental Health and Addictions...Read More