|
Showing 1 - 1 of
1 matches in All Departments
The biologics market continues to witness an impressive rate of
growth and the monoclonal antibody market, in particular, has
contributed remarkably to the expansion of this segment within the
pharmaceutical industry. In 2006, close to 80% of the annual
biologics growth rate in the United States (US) was attributed to
cancer and anti-TNF antibodies, with increases in growth of 56% and
25%, respectively, compared to those in the previous year.
Additionally, the monoclonal antibody sector is anticipated to
achieve a growth rate of approximately 14% by 2012, easily
outstripping the predicted 0.6% growth rate in the small molecules
market. The robust late-stage antibody pipeline within the biotech
sector has drawn an increasing amount of interest from the large
pharmaceutical industry and has triggered the largest product and
platform deals in 2006, with values more than $2.1 and $5.1 billion
in partnering and mergers and acquisitions, respectively.
Additionally, with the forthcoming emergence of biogenerics,
next-generation bio-improved antibodies have drawn much attention
and increasingly contribute to the growth of the biologics segment.
As next-generation monoclonal antibodies confront their
first-generation rivals, it is critical that these next-generation
products offer a clear differentiating advantage against the
existing competition. Successful strategies for the development of
monoclonal antibodies require integration of knowledge with respect
to target antigen properties, antibody design criteria such as
affinity, isotype selection, Fc domain engineering, pharmacokinetic
and pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) properties, antibody cross-reactivity
across species, market differentiation opportunities for the first-
and next-generation leads, and regulatory requirements from the
early stages of antibody development. Biophysical measurements are
one of the critical components necessary for the design of
effective translational strategies for lead selection and
evaluation of relevant animal species for preclinical safety and
efficacy studies. Incorporation of effective translational
strategies from the early stages of the antibody development
process is a necessity, and when considered, it not only reduces
development time and cost, but also fosters implementation of
rational decision-making throughout all phases of antibody
development. Translational strategies for development of
antibody-based therapeutics should allow understanding of the
relationship between the unit dose and unit effect with respect to
both beneficial and deleterious effects from early stages of
development. The flow of information from later to earlier stages
of development should provide opportunities to facilitate selection
of more effective and novel next-generation drug candidates.
Selection and evaluation of relevant biomarkers in early
preclinical development in relevant animal models should allow for
identifying potential risks to humans and establishing safe
First-In-Human (FIH) dosing strategies. Hence, integration of
knowledge with respect to target antigen properties such as antigen
distribution, expression profile, kinetic properties, target
pharmacology, antigen isoforms and pharmacological redundancy in
health and disease, as well as antibody design criteria, such as
antibody isotype, affinity, PK/PD and safety is a critical
necessity for the design of effective translational strategies.
Additionally, these factors will further offer critical
differentiating characteristics for next-generation antibodies, and
novel technologies prove instrumental in generation of bio-improved
antibody candidates for market entry. This book will examine many
important considerations necessary for the design of effective
translational strategies during the development of antibody-based
therapeutics."
|
|