Alkem Launches DCGI-Approved Semaglutide Pre-Filled Syringes in India at Rs. 350 Per Dose
Alkem launches DCGI-approved semaglutide pre-filled syringes at Rs. 350, raising fill-finish, cold-chain, and regulatory compliance questions for Indian GLP-1 manufacturers.
Breaking News
Jun 03, 2026
Simantini Singh Deo

Alkem Laboratories' entry into the GLP-1 segment with a DCGI-approved semaglutide pre-filled syringe at Rs. 350 per dose signals a structural shift in how India's generic manufacturers are approaching high-complexity biologics, and raises immediate questions for QA directors and supply-chain leads around pre-filled syringe fill-finish capacity, cold-chain integrity, and device-drug combination compliance.
The single-dose pre-filled format introduces a specific set of manufacturing obligations. Pre-filled syringes for injectable biologics fall under 21 CFR Part 211 equivalents in India's Schedule M framework, requiring validated container-closure integrity testing, extractables and leachables profiling, and sterility assurance protocols aligned with ICH Q10 quality system expectations. For plant heads scaling this format, the combination of a peptide active with a primary packaging system demands robust process validation data across fill volume, stopper compatibility, and cold-chain excursions.
The Rs. 350 price point, positioned well below the innovator reference, reflects the competitive logic now driving Indian GLP-1 launches, but the operational burden of maintaining 2–8°C cold-chain distribution at that margin is non-trivial. Logistics leads will need to assess whether existing cold-chain infrastructure, validated transport lanes, and last-mile storage at dispensing points can sustain the product's stability profile without compromising sterility assurance.
For regulatory affairs teams, the DCGI approval pathway for a semaglutide biosimilar or generic formulation carries its own documentation weight: comparative pharmacokinetic data, device usability studies, and labelling aligned with approved indications covering both type 2 diabetes and obesity. The dual-indication scope broadens the patient population but also expands post-market pharmacovigilance obligations under India's pharmacovigilance programme.
Alkem's move is unlikely to remain isolated; several Indian generics manufacturers have signalled GLP-1 pipeline activity, and the competitive pricing pressure on innovator products in this segment will intensify as more DCGI-approved entrants reach the market.
Source: Media4Growth via Indian Pharma Post, 2 June 2026.
