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Home > Market Research > Drug Delivery > Delivery Mechanisms for Large Molecule Drugs: Successes and failures of leading technologies
Delivery Mechanisms for Large Molecule Drugs Successes and failures of leading technologies and key drivers for market success
Emerging drug delivery technologies aim to improve measures of safety, efficacy, convenience and compliance in both new and existing drug candidates and products. For currently marketed products, reformulations with new delivery technologies will extend the period of patent protection. New formulas will be key to boosting sales volume of large molecule products in chronic diseases where patient compliance surrounding dosing strategies and ease of administration are limitations on market growth. In R&D pipelines, novel applications of delivery technologies will expose new methods to reformulate failed or discontinued drugs and mask their unfavorable effects, expanding the market of potential drug candidates. ‘Delivery Mechanisms for Large Molecule Drugs’ is a report published by Business Insights that examines the future of the drug delivery technologies market, and the short, mid, and long-term growth dynamics which will underpin investment decisions. This report will measure the performance of leading drug delivery technologies applied within clinical R&D pipelines and identify when specific therapy area populations are set to benefit from emerging innovations. The market success of new technologies is forecast by their ability to fulfill unmet medical need, the maturity of the technology in clinical application, and the level of commercial interest and investment landscape.
Key Findings
Nanotechnology will have the greatest impact on the drug delivery market. However, the immaturity of the technology is likely to delay marketed presence over the next 7-10 years.
Antibody fragmentation and PEGylation technologies are the leading targeted large molecule particle engineering formulas with marketed drug product presence. However, antibody fragments have suffered 33 candidate failures compared with 12 PEGylated products.
Active transdermal technologies have generated the greatest number of technologies and devices amongst large molecule delivery innovations, with 16 clinical and 8 preclinical drug/device combination products and 49 stand-alone devices.
Electronic delivery is set to have the greatest impact upon the device industry. Electronic device control is more advanced within the field of pulmonary delivery than transdermal delivery, with the average pulmonary-based product in early clinical phase I compared to late-stage preclinical investigation for transdermal. There are, however, 25 transmembrane electroporation technologies currently being developed, in comparison to 12 for electronic active pulmonary delivery.
Use this report to...
• Understand the drivers of new delivery platform developments with this report’s analysis of therapy area growth drivers, clinical development spend and unmet clinical need. • Identify the risks and opportunities associated with emerging delivery technologies by measuring the risk potential and maturity of innovative platforms. • Evaluate the latest developments in systemic targeting technologies by using this report’s analysis of innovations and pipeline progress for the latest active and passive targeting techniques. • Discover which technologies have the greatest potential within large molecule product markets in the future with this report’s comparative analysis of growth metrics for leading platforms and an evaluation of their established clinical drug application. • Assess recent innovations in pulmonary delivery technologies and needle-free transdermal delivery with this report’s analysis of clinical and preclinical developments and commercial potential.
Explore issues including... High failure rates for new technologies. The high failure rates of drugs to which pioneering delivery techniques have been applied have made investors cautious. Unknown clinical safety and efficacy profiles have made it harder to determine appropriate parameters for success in clinical application. Immaturity of technologies. Many of the technology platforms profiled in this report are in the early stages of application to clinical drug candidates. Those that have achieved success in marketed drug candidates already have ‘next generation’ alternatives in technology pipelines. Unknown clinical pharmacokinetics. Many of these platforms remain in such an immature stage that they have yet to be applied to drug candidates. In vivo experimental use in drug candidates can never accurately predict success once a technology has reached maturity. Even for those technologies with established use in R&D pipelines, long-term clinical efficacy remains unknown. Regulation of the new technologies. While the clinical performance of new particle engineered drug molecules or active delivery devices remain unknown, regulatory bodies only have existing data-measure demands on which to benchmark their expectations. This framework will be shifted in line with emerging clinical performance datasets.
Discover... • Which delivery technologies will have the greatest impact on the large molecule market in the short, mid, and long-term? • How mature are the different delivery technologies and what is their pipeline presence in terms of application to R&D drugs? • Will particle engineering technologies drive injectable formulas to dominate the market? • Which therapy areas will benefit most from growth in the different technologies? • How can the risk-profiles associated with clinical use be most effectively minimized? • What are the leading novel platforms? • Who are the targets for out-licensing and co-development of platforms for clinical use? • What are the leading technology platforms within different classifications and how have they achieved their growth?
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Table of Contents
Table of Contents Delivery Mechanisms for Large Molecule Drugs Executive summary 10 Introduction 10 Drivers for new platform developments 11 Resistors of change 12 Key emerging technologies 13 Systemic targeting technologies 14 Ease of use systems 15 Conclusions 16 Chapter 1 Introduction 18 Summary 18 Introduction 19 The emergence of large molecule therapeutics 21 Definitions 23 Technology platform definitions 23 Product coverage 25 Market coverage 25 Leading technologies coverage 27 The measures for market success 28 Chapter 2 Drivers of new platform developments 30 Summary 30 Introduction 31 The growth of the large molecule market 32 Therapy area growth drivers 33 Clinical development spend 35 Cost-effective manufacturing 36 Existing failure rates 36 Unmet clinical needs 38 Boosting patient compliance 39 Overcoming stability, bioavailability and toxic effects 40 Improving efficacy 40 Chapter 3 Risk, costs and technology maturity 42 Summary 42 Introduction 43 Risk of failure with new technologies 43 Unknown drug candidate pharmacokinetics 45 Solubility and instability with oral candidates 45 Bioavailability 46 Toxicity and unknown long-term effects 47 The shifting regulatory framework 47 Case study: Insulin delivery and investor confidence 48 The impact of cost and revenue on the decision to innovate 51 Immaturity concerns 52 Maturity of the delivery technologies 52 Chapter 4 Key emerging technologies 58 Summary 58 The forecast market impact 59 Nanotechnology to enhance solubility profiles 60 The evolving nanotechnology industry 61 The development pipeline 63 Leading clinical applications 64 Parenteral delivery systems 66 Dermal platform systems 67 Nanostructured materials; oral and depot system use 68 Novel oral drug delivery systems 68 Investigative nanoshells, nanofilms and active control 69 Advances in microelectronics 71 Existing electronic applications 71 The development pipeline for microelectronics 73 Microchip technologies 73 Inkjet technology for drug delivery 74 Chapter 5 Systemic targeting techniques 78 Summary 78 Introduction 79 Systemic passive targeting techniques 81 Stealth technologies: Immune system evasion 81 PEGylation technologies 83 PEGylation in clinical pipelines 84 Preclinical PEGylation investigation 86 The limitations of PEG 86 Next generation PEGylation 87 Systemic active targeting techniques 88 Antibody techniques 89 Antibody fragments 90 Binding specificity 91 Novel combination technologies to improve targeting 92 Cost-effective manufacture 93 The development pipeline 94 The emergence of IgG4 antibody therapies 94 Small modular Immunopharmaceuticals as antibody alternatives 95 Pipeline novel conjugate technologies 96 Antibody fragments in targeted carrier systems 96 Investigational protein carrier Prodrug complexes 97 Clotting factor conjugate targeting 97 Molecular trojan horse techniques 98 Chapter 6 Ease of use systems 102 Summary 102 Introduction 103 Pulmonary delivery technologies 104 Particle engineering technologies for pulmonary delivery 105 Vaporization techniques and delivery control 106 Applications of electronics 106 Needle-free transdermal delivery 107 Leading technology platforms 109 Needle-free pressure-based systems 110 Microinjection platforms for intra-epidermal delivery 110 EMEA filing for first microinjection system 111 technology platform 112 Electrotransport systems 113 Electroporation in transdermal delivery 113 TransPharma Medical ltd’s RF-Microchannel technology 114 Novel approaches to active intra-epidermal delivery 115 Laser drug delivery systems 115 Thermal energy platform 116 Chapter 7 Conclusions 118 Summary 118 Introduction 119 Pharma vs biotech large molecule R&D investment 119 Leading technologies 121 Growth in particle engineering technologies 121 The impact of new routes of administration 122 Large molecule drug delivery market growth and maturity 123 Current and future market impact 127 Therapy area impact 127 Timeline of impact 130 Summary of technology success and impact 133 Appendix 136 Index 136 Methodology 137 Methodology 137 MedTRACK platform identification 137 Glossary 138 List of Figures Figure 1.1: The role of drug delivery in the product R&D pipeline 20 Figure 1.2: Biopharmaceutical company dependence on large molecule drugs* 22 Figure 1.3: Defining the pathway from proprietary technology to clinical use 24 Figure 2.4: The global pipeline for chemical and biologic drugs, October 2008 33 Figure 2.5: Number of pipeline biologic drug candidates and products, by therapy area, October 2008 34 Figure 2.6: Pharma R&D spend 2004-2009e 35 Figure 2.7: Biotech R&D spend ($bn), 2004-2009e 36 Figure 2.8: Pharmacokinetic effects; resistors of market growth and opportunity for new technologies 38 Figure 3.9: Key innovative technologies, clinical drug failures and discontinued products, November 2008 44 Figure 3.10: Development pipeline for insulin devices, human insulins and analogues, October 2008 49 Figure 3.11: Discontinued insulin devices, human insulins and analogues, platforms for delivery, per year 2001-2008 51 Figure 3.12: Key particle engineering technologies; industry size and maturity 54 Figure 3.13: Key route of administration technologies; industry size and maturity 55 Figure 4.14: Investment deals and clinical applications in nanotechnology drug delivery platforms, 2002-Q2 2008 62 Figure 4.15: Product pipeline; large molecule nanotechnology innovations 64 Figure 4.16: Maturity of electronic active delivery platforms in transmembrane and pulmonary delivery systems 72 Figure 5.17: The market advantage of targeted drugs 80 Figure 5.18: Passive targeting strategies for large molecule delivery 81 Figure 5.19: The benefits of PEGylation to improve pharmacological profiles 83 Figure 5.20: Active targeting strategies for large molecule delivery 88 Figure 5.21: The global MAb product pipeline by phase, Q4 2008 89 Figure 5.22: Antibody fragmentation platforms – Competitive advantage 90 Figure 5.23: Antibody fragments: separating targeting domains 92 Figure 6.24: Transdermal and transmembrane active platform technologies, November 2008 108 Figure 6.25: Investment in and maturity of active transdermal delivery 109 Figure 7.26: Big biotech v big pharma large molecule patent applications, 2003-2007, global 120 Figure 7.27: Particle engineering technologies in drug R&D pipelines, by phase, October 2008 122 Figure 7.28: Industry growth and investment, leading innovative drug delivery platforms 124 Figure 7.29: Growth in technology deals; 1998-2007 126 Figure 7.30: Impact of new technology platforms developments on therapy area pipelines 127 Figure 7.31: Therapy area focus of innovative technology product candidates, October 2008 128 Figure 7.32: New medical device technologies, anticipated market impact 129 Figure 7.33: Emerging particle engineering technologies, anticipated market impact 130 Figure 7.34: The impact of new delivery technologies; timeline for success 131 Figure 7.35: Measures of technology success 133 List of Tables Table 1.1: Nektar’s leading innovative technology pipeline 25 Table 1.2: Needle free delivery; Key routes of administration 26 Table 1.3: Technology market coverage 27 Table 2.4: The global pipeline for chemical and biologic drugs, October 2008 37 Table 3.5: Key innovative technologies, clinical drug failures and discontinued products, November 2008 45 Table 3.6: Key route of administration technologies; industry size and maturity 56 Table 4.7: Nanotechnology drug delivery platforms, large molecule vs small molecule applications, November 2008 63 Table 4.8: Nanoparticles as drug delivery carriers 64 Table 4.9: Leading clinical parenteral drug delivery 66 Table 5.10: Clinical PEGylation stealth targeting technologies 84 Table 5.11: Antibody fragment products, clinical applications 93 Table 5.12: Armagen’s proprietary CNS product pipeline: Trojan horse conjugate delivery 99 Table 6.13: Small molecule success of membrane transport technologies, November 2008 106 Table 6.14: Clinical use electronic pulmonary delivery technologies 107 Table 6.15: Transdermal and transmembrane active platform technologies, November 2008 108 Table 6.16: Novel electroporation platforms; transdermal alternatives 113 Table 7.17: Innovative technology products in R&D pipelines, October 2008 123 Table 7.18: Industry maturity and investment, leading innovative drug delivery platforms 125 Table 7.19: Growth in technology deals, 1998-2007 126 Table 7.20: Therapy area focus of innovative technology product candidates, October 2008 129
For full details, please email keithw@cmsinfo.com
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