EC approves DuoCort's adrenal insufficiency therapy

by Emma 8. November 2011 16:50

 

The European Commission (EC) has authorised DuoCort Pharma’s Plenadren (hydrocortisone) to be marketed in the EU for the treatment of adrenal insufficiency.

The dual release hormone replacement therapy is the first pharmaceutical innovation in over 50 years for adults suffering from adrenal insufficiency, or cortisol deficiency.

Professor Gudmundur Johannsson, Chief Medical Officer at DuoCort Pharma, said: “Plenadren offers a welcome new treatment option to help patients suffering from adrenal insufficiency. It can improve therapy for many of the almost 200,000 patients in Europe who suffer from this disease and who need lifelong cortisol replacement therapy for their survival.”

The once-daily tablet is designed to imitate the normal physiological cortisol profile, with an outer layer that releases hydrocortisone immediately into the bloodstream and an inner core releasing the rest of the medicine gradually throughout the day.

Although glucocorticoid replacement therapy for adrenal insufficiency has been available for decades, complications have been linked to the medication, including premature death, impaired quality of life, increased risk of cardiovascular diseases, and decreased bone mineral density.

Adrenal insufficiency (cortisol deficiency) is a rare, life-threatening disease that affects patients in their active years. Patients require lifelong replacement therapy with hydrocortisone, the synthetic form of cortisol, replacing or substituting the hormones that the patient's adrenal glands are not producing.

DuoCort Pharma provides drug development with a focus on improving glucocorticoid therapy. The company is currently being absorbed by ViroPharma, who acquired the pharmaceutical company for an upfront payment of $33 million dollars in October.

Trajenta now available for T2DM

by emma 20. September 2011 16:58

Trajwhite

Boehringer Ingelheim and Eli Lilly have launched Trajenta (linagliptin), a single dose, once-daily tablet for adults with type II diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in the UK.

Trajenta has been shown to deliver significant HbA1c reductions compared to placebo and was generally well tolerated in clinical trials involving more than 4,000 patients.

Professor Anthony Barnett, Consultant Physician and Emeritus Professor of Medicine, Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust and University of Birmingham, says its release is “an important advance in the management” of diabetes.

The drug is licensed for adults with T2MD as a monotherapy in patients inadequately controlled by diet and exercise alone, and for whom metformin is inappropriate due to intolerance, or contraindicated due to renal impairment.

It is also licensed in combination with metformin when diet and exercise plus metformin alone do not provide adequate glycaemic control; and in combination with a sulphonylurea and metformin when diet and exercise plus dual therapy with these medicinal products do not provide adequate glycaemic control.

In clinical trials, a mean HbA1c reduction from baseline of 0.7% was sustained over 102 weeks as add on to metformin and a sulphonylurea in patients using Trajenta.

Around a third of people with diabetes are affected by chronic kidney disease. The convenient tablet is the only dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DDP-4) inhibitor which is primarily excreted via the bile, and the first in this class licensed for use in T2DM, irrespective of degree of renal impairment.

“Linagliptin offers the benefits of the DPP-4 inhibitor class with good tolerability, weight neutrality and low risk of hypoglycaemia and the additional advantage of health professionals being able to prescribe without dose adjustment irrespective of the patient's renal function,” added Professor Anthony Barnett. “Renal impairment is common in people with type 2 diabetes so this latter point is extremely important.”

CV-friendly drug approved in EU

by emma 2. August 2011 15:17

Pf product news

AstraZeneca’s cardiovascular-friendly drug, Axanum, has been approved for use in 23 EU countries and Norway.

The once-daily medicine is a combination of low-dose ASA (aspirin) and esomeprazole, indicated for prevention of cardiovascular (CV) events in high-risk patients who are likely to develop gastric ulcers.

Tony Zook, Executive Vice President of AstraZeneca’s Global Commercial Organisation says the company is pleased the drug has joined the “significant regulatory approvals” the company has had recently.

Unlike generic aspirin medicines, Axanum can protect patients against gastric ulcers. Esomeprazole is an active ingredient which reduces the risk of peptic ulcer development and is the only proton pump inhibitor (PPI) approved to reduce the risk of re-bleeding in peptic ulcer bleed patients.

AstraZeneca is a global biopharmaceutical company which develops and commercialises prescription medicines for gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, neuroscience, respiratory and inflammation, oncology and infectious diseases.

TextBox

Tag cloud

Calendar

<<  May 2013  >>
MoTuWeThFrSaSu
293012345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
272829303112
3456789

View posts in large calendar