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Pharmalicensing
is a division of
UTEK Europe Ltd
UTEK Corporation
Articles

Pharmalicensing brings you advice, commentary and analysis from industry experts.

An overview of drug delivery technologies

This article looks at drug delivery technologies and the key role they will play in the future success or failure of the biopharmaceutical industry in an age of modern and fast track drug discovery. This is the first in a series of articles that will review the key drug delivery formats available or in development.

Drug delivery systems (DDS) are a strategic tool for expanding markets/indications, extending product life cycles and generating opportunities. DDS make a significant contribution to global pharmaceutical sales through market segmentation, and are moving rapidly, from traditional oral and transdermal delivery of new chemical entities (NCE), to more advanced non-invasive delivery of proteins and peptides.

This overview is intended for those involved in non-instrumental drug delivery systems in which a drug is contained, or presented in a special formulation that modifies its absorption characteristics.

There has been continuous growth in the area, although some 25 DDS products, mainly oral, account for world-wide sales of US$11.5 billion per annum, shown in table 1 below. This growth is not only of strategic importance for market advantage over competitors; drug delivery technologies also offer product patent extension and improved efficacy or targeted delivery of drug.

Table 1: Drug Delivery Products: 1996 US Sales by Administration Route

Route

Sales US$ billion

% Share

ORAL

6.10

53

INHALATION

3.10

27

IMPLANT

1.15

10

TRANSDERMAL

0.95

8

OTHERS

2.30

2

Total

11.5

100

Source: Dillon-Read Equity Research

Drug Delivery Industry April 1997

Drug delivery systems play an important role in developing successful pharmaceutical products. They:

  1. enable a drug to be presented to a patient in a manner that makes it acceptable to them and allows the drug to be effective
  2. widen the population of patients who are able to use a drug
  3. increase the range of indications that a drug can be used to treat
  4. improve the performance of a drug
  5. are also used as marketing tool to attract users of the drug

Drug delivery technology plays a key role that is particular for each class of drug, as shown in the table below.

Table 2: Role of drug delivery

Drug Active

Technology Benefits

Genes

Accurate and low risk delivery to target organ

Vaccines

Oral and nasal delivery for easy administration and distribution

Proteins and Peptides

Oral, nasal or inhalation delivery for transport across barriers and control rate of access

Water Insoluble Drugs

Better absorption and bioavailability

Current drug delivery systems include steady state release, pulsed drug delivery, injection free, subcutaneous, suppository, autoinjection and targeted delivery systems, offering benefits of improved drug absorption, reduced compliance issues, prolonged effect, and minimised side effects.

An example is the Subcutaneous Autoinjector (Imigran, Glaxo product) which has key characteristics of:

  • fast onset of action
  • high bioavailability
  • automated injection
  • patient compliance

Other drug delivery systems include:

  • Suppository systems, providing
  • good onset of action
  • convenience
  • market/population specific
  • Intranasal spray systems, providing
  • fast onset of action
  • high bioavailability
  • convenient

Nasal systems have the potential to act as a conduit for delivering drugs to the brain. The olfactory system provides a direct link to the brain, therefore bypassing the blood brain barrier. This could result in Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative disorders being treated in this manner.

  • Inhalation technology offers aqueous aerosol droplets containing liposomes as slow release carriers has been employed. The technology is designed to avoid the convoluted branching of the bronchial tree and wafts most of the aerosol into absorbent alveoli. The technology is said to avoid the bronchioles and ciliary clearance, and delivers the aerosol to deep lung for sustained release.

Inhalation systems also include dry powder technology platforms and pulmonary delivery of macromolecules.

  • Fast dissolving technology offers
    • improved compliance/added convenience
    • no water needed
    • no chewing needed
    • better taste
    • improved stability
    • suitable for controlled/sustained release actives

This technology has attributes/value added benefits which include improved oral absorption, faster onset of action and avoids the first pass effect. The technology also has significance in dysphagia – 35% of the population have difficulty in swallowing, based on dysphagia prevalence of swallowing complaints and clinical findings, 30-40% of elderly nursing home patients and 25-50% of patients hospitalised for acute neurological disorders and head injuries (according to Dysphagia, Aging and Esophagus report).

Needs

The need for non-invasive delivery systems continues due to patients’ poor acceptance and compliance with existing delivery regimes, limited market size for drug companies and drug uses, coupled with high cost of disease management.

The current needs of the industry are improved solubility/stability, biological half-life and bioavailability enhancement of poorly absorbed drugs. Key issues facing the biopharma industry are to improve safety (decreasing gastrointestinal side effects), improve efficacy for organ targeting, and improved compliance via sustained release or easy to swallow dosage forms.

Without this technology, a large number of proteins and peptides resulting from display technologies and genomic libraries may lose the opportunity in the biopharma industry due to poor bioavailability or pharmacokinetics. Current technologies for biopharmaceutical delivery include oral formulations i.e. tablet presentations and multi-dose formats, inhaler systems, transdermal patches, implants, improved parenteral therapy, ophthalmic and nasal delivery, buccal delivery and vaginal delivery.

New technologies include improved oral formulations, site specific release, carrier-based systems, intestinal mucosa protection, inhalation therapy i.e. post-CFC propellants, dry powder formulations, macromolecular delivery across cell membranes, targeted delivery i.e. viral vectors, liposomes, monoclonal antibodies, liposomes, photodynamic therapy, improved transdermal patches, electrically aided transport, crossing the blood-brain barrier and polymer/niosome conjugation.

In the field of gene therapy, one of the most exciting and potentially lucrative areas of drug therapy, drug delivery technologies will play a key role in the success or failure of the industry.

Future drug delivery technologies

Future drug delivery technologies will focus on:

  • human genome, discovering the location and composition of all human genes to develop and deliver drugs tailored to an individual’s genetic make-up
  • development of delivery technologies to increase efficacy and reduce side effects by target delivery with variations potential of the drug
  • development of new technologies to deliver macromolecules with utilisation of biotechnology and high technology

To make any comments on this article, or to ask a question of the author, please contact the publisher. If you would like to submit an article please subscribe to our PL Intelligence service.

The opinions expressed in the articles published in this section do not necessarily reflect those of Pharmalicensing or UTEK Corporation. No actions including proposals to or agreements with other companies should be taken by any reader without obtaining specific business or legal advice. Neither the publisher nor the authors accept any liability for any actions or activities undertaken by any reader or other third party as a consequence of these articles or for any errors or omissions therein.

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