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Bioequivalence, Drugs with Narrow Therapeutic Index and the Phenomenon of Biocreep: A Critical Analysis of the System for Generic Substitution

Journal

HEALTHCARE
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/healthcare10081392

Keywords

generics; bioequivalence; substitution; biocreep; narrow therapeutic index drugs

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The prescription of generic drugs is an important cost-containment strategy in health systems. Regulatory authorities encourage or require the use of generic drugs due to their lower price compared to brand-name alternatives. However, drug substitution can be critical, especially for drugs with a narrow therapeutic index. Additionally, generics cannot be automatically considered bioequivalent due to the biocreep phenomenon.
The prescription of generic drugs represents one of the main cost-containment strategies of health systems, aimed at reducing pharmaceutical expenditure. In this context, most regulatory authorities encourage or obligate dispensing generic drugs because they are far less expensive than their brand-name alternatives. However, drug substitution can be critical in particular situations, such as the use of drugs with a narrow therapeutic index (NTI). Moreover, generics cannot automatically be considered bioequivalent with each other due to the biocreep phenomenon. In Italy, the regulatory authority has established the Transparency Lists which include the medications that will be automatically substituted for brand-name drugs, except in exceptional cases. This is a useful tool to guide prescribers and guarantee pharmaceutical sustainability, but it does not consider the biocreep phenomenon.

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