An important step not just for the patient, but also for the doctor who is treating her and prescribed her her first biopharmaceutical: “Ever since we have biosimilars, it has gotten a lot easier for doctors to prescribe biopharmaceuticals in general”, says rheumatologist Dr. Silke Zinke in the aforementioned film. “The advantage is that biosimilars have highly similar efficacy compared to the original reference products. We know this from extensive studies. What’s more, they are much more cost-effective for doctors and cheaper for patients.”
In fact, the number of patients receiving treatment with biopharmaceuticals has risen significantly in recent years. A PHARAO study of the Bavarian Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians (KVB) commissioned by the AG Pro Biosimilars and published in 2020 shows: The number of rheumatoid patients receiving biopharmaceuticals alone has risen by five per cent in the last five years – from 13,5% in 2014 to 18,7% in 2019. Moreover, of those 18,7 per cent, more than half of the patients received a biosimilar.