|
Focus
Trends in Diabetes Research
Against the increasing diabetes disease burden, the insulin
and OAD (Oral-Anti-diabetic) drug segments are bound to see robust growth.
Divya Pamnani reviews the current market scenarios for each segment and
profiles research trends that are driving the billion dollar diabetes industry
Diabetes
is today recognised as a major lifestyle disease in the India, with the country
having possibly the largest number of diabetics in the world. It's ageing population,
sedentary lifestyles, high stress levels, improper sleep and deteriorating eating
habits are factors contributing to India being dubiously hailed as the world's
diabetic capital. According to the International Diabetes Federation report
of 2006, there are around 41 million diabetics in India, which is expected to
rise to 70 million by the year 2025. Having reached such epidemic levels, this
emphasises the need for novel agents to surface in the market, in particular
the insulin market, which still offers the most widespread and effective blood
sugar lowering treatment.
Against this disease burden, the insulin and OAD (oral-antidiabetic) drug segments
are bound to see robust growth.
Insulin Market Scenario
According to the Global Insulin Market report, the global insulin market currently
estimated at $ 7.5 billion, growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR)
of 14 per cent is expected to rise to a whopping $ 14.5 billion by 2010. This
is directly linked to the growing number of diabetics. This report predicts
that approximately 380 million people will suffer from diabetes by 2025. Nearly
one-third of total diabetes patients will be from India and China. Presently
both have fledgling, but emerging insulin markets. In addition, this report
estimates that 60 per cent of the insulin available in the market today is available
in injectable form through syringes, pens, and pumps. The market report claims
that non-invasive insulin therapy is the current R&D benchmark, for effective
management of type 1 and type 2 diabetes. This will subsequently offer patient
potential and marketing strength.
Currently insulin is the only the gold standard treatment for type 1 diabetes,
and is also increasingly recommended for treatment of type 2 diabetes. However,
unmet needs in regards to administration of insulin and its efficacy exist in
the market. Insulin injections, currently the most widespread form of administration,
have several inherent disadvantages which include local pain, itching, allergy,
and insulin lipodystrophy around the injection site. Insulin lipodystrophy results
in atrophy of fats at the frequent sites of insulin injection (It can be observed
as irregular depressions on the skin). Further clinical trials have shown that
even on injectable insulin treatment, a significant percentage of patients fail
to attain lasting gylcemic control due to noncompliance. Essentially, administration
of insulin needs closer R&D attention.
With regards to efficacy, novel insulin needs to have a similar onset of action
profile mimicking the body's own insulin pattern both between meals (prandial)
and during night (basal) to control blood glucose levels. A Type 2 diabetic
patient cannot produce the first-phase insulin release spike in relation to
meals, release glucose from liver and absorb additional glucose from the food,
due to poorly functioning beta cells of the pancreas. Therefore an unmet need
is to mimic the first-phase insulin release spike closely. In addition to this,
the benchmark insulin formulation needs to exhibit 24-hour activity to control
blood sugar level in the body, without having a peak in its metabolic effect.
According to the Insulin Market report, there is no insulin preparation on the
market today that fits the efficacy-convenience-bill entirely.
The insulin industry is focusing on bridging this gap between
current therapy and the unmet need by introducing devices with innovative technology
aimed at different routes of administration. Recent developments in the administration
of insulin include inhalable insulin, topical patches, buccal spray insulin,
and nasal/intranasal spray formulations.
|
Candidate
|
Trial Phase
|
Formulation
|
Technology
|
Company
|
| Alveair |
Phase I - II |
Inhaler formulation |
Polymer/bio-adhesive
drug delivery platform |
Coremed, Inc. |
| Oral-lyn |
Phase III & commercially launched
in some countries |
Buccal spray |
RapidMist delivery technology |
Generex Biotechnology |
| IN-105 |
Phase I - II |
Capsule formulation |
Conjugated insulin molecule |
Biocon Ltd. |
| Undisclosed |
Pre-clinical phase - animal trials |
Capsule formulation |
biodegradable novel polymeric nanoparticles |
Transgene Biotek Ltd. |
| Technosphere |
Phase III |
Inhaler formulation, inhalant micro particle
formulation |
CPE-215 Permeation enhancementtechnology |
MannKind Corp. |
| U-Strip |
Pre-clinical phase - animal trials |
Insulin patch |
U-Strip patch technology |
Encapsulation Systems Inc. |
| Nasulin |
Phase II |
intranasal insulin spray |
|
Bentley Pharmaceuticals |
Buccal Spray Insulin
Generex Biotechnology, Canada has under its wing, Oral-lyn TM, an oral insulin
spray product. The liquid formulation is absorbed into the body by the lining
of the inner mouth using the company's proprietary RapidMistTM device. Since
it is buccally absorbed, no insulin is deposited in the lungs by the Oral-lyn
RapidMist. August 2007 saw the commercial launch of Oral-lyn in the Indian market.
Generex Biotechnology entered into Master Product Licensing and Distribution
Agreement of Oral-lyn with Shreya Life Sciences, the fourth largest distributor
of insulin in India. In April 2008, Generex entered into a similar agreement
for the distribution of Oral-lyn in China, Hong Kong, and the following additional
countries: Indonesia, South Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand,
and Vietnam. Presently - Generex Oral-lyn is in Phase III clinical trials at
several sites around the world - US, Canada and Ukraine.
Oral Insulin
Oral insulin, also hailed as the 'next generation insulin' intends to bridge
the present gap, aiming to establish efficacy, while simultaneously providing
convenience to diabetic patients. Investment in research is substantial and
ongoing, clinical trials are looking promising, oral insulin could be the next
breakthrough in decades of insulin research. This means that millions of diabetics
world over could soon forego injections.
Biocon Ltd, Bangalore is developing the IN-105 conjugated insulin molecule,
administered as a tablet and delivered through the portal vein. In the clinic,
this molecule has completed Phase I trials and is expected to enter Phase II
in India later this year to illustrate proof of concept. The encouraging results
of the Phase Ia and Ib studies represent a pivotal hurdle crossed in the development
of IN-105 as a product. IN-105 will enter Phase I trials in Europe towards the
end of the year. Transgene Biotek, Andhra Pradesh, unique in its approach, is
developing an oral insulin technology using biodegradable novel polymeric nanoparticles
loaded with insulin as a new carrier to ferry the insulin across the intestinal
epithelial tissues. Nanoparticles are solid spherical particles with a size
range of 10 and 1000 nm containing dispersed drugs. Transgene has attempted
to improve the intestinal absorption of insulin and other peptides. The technology
has been well proven in animal models, and human clinical studies are in progress.
Still Betting on Inhalable InsulinMannKind Corp Undeterred
Excubera, the first version of inhaled insulin, approved by the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) in 2006, was dropped by Pfizer in less than a year of poor
sales, simply because it failed to gain acceptance by patients and physicians.
Exubera cost Pfizer a hefty $ 2.8 billion in pre-tax charges, while revenues
were under $ 12 million. Exubera (recombinant human insulin with particle diameters
between 1 and 5 mm) was a massive technical achievement, involving the stabilisation
of the insulin molecule to make it bioavailable in the dry powder form. It was
the first insulin product that did not need to be injected, so when it was approved
in January 2006, after being in development for 11 years, there were high expectations.
With several advances in devices to inject insulin, the Exubera inhaler, the
size of a can of tennis balls, was not appreciated by patients. Not only was
the inhaler too large, but dosing was difficult as well. Pen-like injectors
seemed like a safer option, with pre-measured doses. Moreover, the complexities
of the inhaler device with dosing required healthcare professionals to be trained.
Besides the disadvantages of size, dosing and training, Excubera had a known
side effect - it reduced lung function and capacity. The worst and last hit
that Excubera took was lung cancer. In the Pfizer trial, six of the 4,740 patients
treated with Exubera developed lung cancer
After Pfizer exited the market for inhaled insulin, other Big Pharma players
like Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk also walked away from their products AIR Insulin
and AERx iDMS respectively, on accounts of commercial and clinical unviability
of these products. The ripples of Exubera's failure spread to other drug firms
as well, who found it increasingly hard to create a market for their products.
However, California based MannKind Corp., a small biopharmaceutical company,
is holding its ground. They are relentlessly optimistic about Technosphere,
in the face of this inhaled insulin debacle, which is easily the biggest flop
in modern pharmaceutical history. MannKind continues to resist comparisons to
Pfizer's Excubera, and continues to fight struggles of flailing company share
prices and increased uncertainties in the regulatory environment. There is a
lot at stake for Alfred Mann, the billionaire philanthropist behind MannKind,
who has bet nearly half of his estimated $ 2.2 billion fortune in the hopes
of a blockbuster innovation, believing that Technosphere's day will come. Once
clinical benefit of the product is proved, coupled with patient inhalation convenience,
Technosphere might receive a reimbursement approval from the healthcare payors
across the major country markets after its expected launch in 2010.
Oral Anti-diabetics (OADS) Segment
Oral anti-diabetic drugs, also called oral hypoglycemic drugs, are used to treat
mostly type 2 diabetics (non-insulin dependent diabetics). Treatment, relative
to severity of the disease involves monotherapy (an oral drug), combination
therapy (two or more oral drugs) or combination therapy involving an oral drug
with insulin.
There are five main classes of oral agents used in the management of type 2
diabetes which work in different ways to maintain blood glucose control.
Sulfonylureas, Meglitinides, Biguanides, Thiazolidinedione derivatives (also
glitazones), Alpha-glucosidase inhibitors, and Fixed combination pills
New Classes of OADs
DPP-IV (dipeptidyl peptidase-4) inhibitors: are a new therapeutic class of drugs,
which enhance glucagon-like peptide-1 and gastric inhibitory polypeptide secretion,
leading to increased secretion of insulin and inhibition of glucagon secretion.
This class of OADs include Januvia (sitagliptin), Galvus (Vildagliptin)
Incretin mimetics: are a distinct class of agents
that work to mimic the anti-diabetic or glucose-lowering actions of the naturally
occurring human incretin hormone glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1). Mechanism
of actions include stimulating the body's ability to produce insulin in response
to elevated levels of blood sugar, inhibiting the release of a hormone called
glucagon following meals, slowing the rate at which nutrients are absorbed into
the bloodstream and reducing food intake. This class includes Byetta (exenatide)Proliferator-Activated
Receptor (PPAR) agonist: their mechanism of action include activating nuclear
transcription factors PPAR-alpha and PPAR-gamma receptors, they simultaneously
reduce atherogenic triglycerides, raise cardioprotective HDl levels and improve
insulin resistance. Galida (tesaglitazar) is a PPAR agonist.
The OADs Market Scenario
According to the Diabetes outlook report, in the year 2000, global retail sales
of diabetes drugs was $ 8.1 billion - the market has tripled in six years, currently
worth roughly $ 24 billion. According to this report the new blockbusters Januvia,
Galvus, Byetta and Actos are existing leading products for oral anti-diabetic
drugs in major country markets.
The Diabetes outlook report claims that a key unmet need that is not addressed
by old anti-diabetic agents is the relentlessly progressive nature of type 2
diabetes. Because of this progression, even patients who initially succeed in
reaching glycemic goals with only diet and exercise will eventually need multidrug
treatment, including insulin. Even when intensive monotherapy with metformin,
insulin, or a sulfonylurea is successful in lowering fasting blood glucose and
HbA1c over the short term, these measurements steadily increase with time due
to disease progression.
Reducing weight in obese diabetics undergoing drug treatment is another major
unmet need. Of the established drugs for treating type 2 diabetes, insulin,
sulfonylureas, and thiazolidinediones (TZDs) cause weight gain. Only metformin
is weight neutral and is sometimes associated with modest weight loss. Essentially,
the benchmark for new anti-diabetic drugs is that it should target diabetes
and obesity. With obesity also on the rise as an epidemic, research targeting
both diseases is likely to be a breakthrough.
Email: pamnani.divya@gmail.com
|