WALTHAM, Mass., Jan. 29 MA-Decision-Resources
MannKind's Technosphere Used in Conjunction With Insulin Glargine Will Earn Decision Resources' Clinical Gold Standard in 2012, According to a New Report from Decision Resources
WALTHAM, Mass., Jan. 29 /PRNewswire/ -- Decision Resources, one of the world's leading research and advisory firms for pharmaceutical and healthcare issues, finds that a non-injectable, short-acting insulin with significantly improved efficacy over insulin aspart (Novo Nordisk's NovoRapid/NovoLog) would earn a 50 percent patient share in type 1 diabetes in the United States and a 58 percent patient share in Europe, according to surveyed U.S. and European endocrinologists.
The new report entitled Type 1 Diabetes: Opportunities Await Therapies That Offer Alternatives to Subcutaneous Injections of Insulins finds that interviewed endocrinologists are excited about Andromeda Biotech/DeveloGen's DiaPep 277, as it will potentially be the first safe disease modifying agent to reach the market for the treatment of type 1 diabetes. Although DiaPep 277 will not obviate the need for insulin injections, the maintenance of pancreatic beta cell function is anticipated to result in improved overall glycemic control for patients, together with reduced risk for hypoglycemia.
Basal-bolus insulin therapy using a regimen of insulin glargine (Sanofi-Aventis's Lantus) and a short-acting insulin analogue (Novo Nordisk's NovoRapid/NovoLog, Eli Lilly's Humalog) is Decision Resources' proprietary clinical gold standard for 2009. Following its anticipated approval for this indication in 2012, MannKind's Technosphere will replace the short-acting insulins as the new clinical gold standard for type 1 diabetes.
"In clinical trials, Technosphere has demonstrated a faster and more physiological action profile than insulin lispro or insulin aspart," said Decision Resources Analyst Caroline Gates. "Technosphere also ranks highly in the area of delivery according to survey data because it offers an alternative to the three-times-daily subcutaneous injections of short-acting insulin. The injection burden associated with the treatment of type 1 diabetes is very high and can involve up to five injections a day, so a reduction in the frequency of injections would be welcomed by both patients and physicians."
www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/...g-insulin-for,696994.shtml