Bengaluru: The U.S. Food ​and Drug Administration ​plans to ease testing requirements for ​companies developing biosimilar drugs, Bloomberg News reported, citing an agency official and internal documents.The FDA is ‌expected to ⁠issue ⁠draft guidance as soon as Monday that would ​reduce the need for certain studies used to show ​that biosimilar medicines match the brand-name treatments they are based on, Bloomberg reported, ​citing an FDA official and ⁠a document ‌it reviewed.Also Read: Zydus Completes Pivotal Study for Keytruda Biosimilar, Prepares USFDA BLA FilingThe change could ​cut about $20 ​million from the cost ⁠of developing a biosimilar, according to Bloomberg. The ​policy is part of a broader ​FDA effort to make it easier for companies to win approval for such drugs in the United States, where officials have long seen them as ‌a way to lower medicine prices, Bloomberg reported.Unlike cheap generic versions ​of simple-to-manufacture pills, ​medicines made ⁠from living cells cannot be exactly copied, so are referred to as biosimilars.The Department of ​Health and Human Services, which oversees the FDA, did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment outside regular working hours.Also Read: Shilpa Biologicals, Stein Cares Ink Exclusive Biosimilar Licensing Pact for Latin America

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