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Generic versions of Ozempic could be available in Canada as early as next year, making Canadians among the first in the world to get cheaper copies of the type 2 diabetes drug that has become a sales and cultural juggernaut because of its weight-loss benefits.

At least four companies have applied to Health Canada to sell copies of Ozempic after its market exclusivity expires on Jan. 4, 2026. Health Canada accepted submissions from the Canadian company Apotex in January and from Switzerland-based Sandoz in November, according to the regulator’s website.

Health Canada also accepted applications from two other unnamed companies in the first quarter of last year, before the regulator enacted a policy naming the manufacturers behind generic drug submissions on April 1, 2024.

Apotex and Sandoz declined interview requests, but Sandoz’s chief executive officer Richard Saynor told Bloomberg in December that his company plans to use the Canadian market as a trial balloon for generic versions of semaglutide, the active ingredient in Ozempic. In the United States and Europe, Ozempic remains on patent for several years.

“If the price comes down from, I don’t know, a few hundred or a thousand dollars a month to a few tens of dollars a month, the patient population’s size is insane,” Mr. Saynor told the business news outlet.

The market for Ozempic in Canada is already huge: Just more than $2.5-billion worth was sold through Canadian retail pharmacies last year, according to the life-science analytics company IQVIA – making Ozempic far and away the best-selling prescription drug in the country. (IQVIA’s figures include markups and dispensing fees.)

Ozempic reached that high-water mark despite Canadian public and private drug plans generally declining to cover it for weight loss, an off-label use.

That means an untold number of Canadians are already using their own money to buy the drug, and more may be willing to do so if the price drops, according to University of British Columbia professor Michael Law, who holds a Canada Research Chair in Access to Medicines.

“We have good evidence that folks are price responsive when it comes to prescription drugs,” he said. “If the price goes down to 35 per cent of what it is now, it’s likely that there will be more people willing to pay for it out of pocket.”

Canada’s tiered pricing framework for generics dictates that injectable drugs such as Ozempic be sold at 35 per cent of the branded product’s list price if there are three or more generic competitors, as there likely would be for such a lucrative market.

Ozempic’s Canadian list price is $218 for four weekly doses, which means generic copies should sell for $76 for a four-week supply before markups and dispensing fees. The list price in the United States is a little less than US$1,000, although, as Novo Nordisk, the drug’s Danish maker, points out, American diabetics with health insurance rarely pay that amount.

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[–] [email protected] -3 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Just go to the fucking gym

[–] [email protected] 0 points 2 weeks ago

The gym doesn't solve weight issues, you can't out exercise a bad diet.

People can get better outcomes then these drugs for free by doing a ketogenic diet. And they don't lose muscle mass like the glp-1 inhibitors