Abstract
OBJECTIVES: This article analyzes how market shares and prices for brand-name drugs are affected by generic competition in China. METHODS: Data were collected for originator drugs that experienced initial generic entry between 2006 and 2016 from China Medicine Economic Information (CMEI), a large database of drug procurement records covering 699 tertiary hospitals across 28 provinces in mainland China. Quarterly utilization and expenditure data were collected. We compared the change of market share and price of originator drugs eight quarters after the first generic entry. General linear regression was performed to analyze the factors that influence the market share and price of originator drugs. RESULTS: A total of 15 of 27 originator drugs maintained over 70% market share eight quarters after the first generic entry. In addition, 24 brand-name companies lowered prices with an average price decrease of 3% eight quarters after the first generic competitor appeared; prices for 3 drugs rose by an average of 0.62%. The median price ratio between originator and generic drugs was 1.76 when the first generic substitution entered, and the ratio became 2.00 eight quarters later. Regression showed that the number of generic manufacturers and time interval since the first generic entry exhibited a negative relation with the market share of originator drugs (P < 0.01; P < 0.01), and no relation with the prices of originator drugs (P = 0.61; P = 0.42). CONCLUSIONS: Generic medicines in China had only modest market penetration and little effect on originator drugs' prices eight quarters after first generic entry.