Oramed
says oral insulin succeeds in midstage type 2 diabetes
trial
Send a link to a friend
[May 18, 2016]
By Bill Berkrot
(Reuters) - Tiny Israeli drugmaker Oramed
Pharmaceuticals Inc on Wednesday said its experimental oral insulin
succeeded in significantly reducing night-time blood glucose in patients
with type 2 diabetes, according to initial data from a midstage trial.
|
The result is likely to surprise many skeptics who did not believe
insulin could be delivered orally because they doubted it could
survive the onslaught of digestive juices so it could have the
intended effect.
Oramed uses a protective coating and a high-enough dose of insulin
so that most of it can be destroyed and still deliver a clinically
beneficial amount of the hormone.
The positive results must be replicated in a larger Phase III trial
before the drug, known as ORMD-0801, can be submitted for approval.
But the data from the Phase II, 180-patient trial represents a major
milestone.
"It's been a long trip but it's finally at the point that it's
beyond a doubt, the oral insulin works," Nadav Kidron, chief
executive of Jerusalem-based Oramed, said in a telephone interview.
The 28-day study involved patients whose type 2 diabetes was not
adequately controlled by metformin. They were dosed before bed time
and had their overnight glucose levels continuously monitored. Those
who received the oral insulin had a mean night-time glucose
reduction of nearly 6.5 percent compared with a placebo.
There were no reported serious adverse side effects and no issues
with hypoglycemia, or dangerously low blood sugar, the company said.
Oramed said it plans to publish more detailed data from the study
once it has had time to analyze the full results.
While insulin is typically associated with type 1 diabetes, many
patients with type 2 eventually see their disease progress to the
point where they need insulin. Type 2 accounts for more than 90
percent of the nearly 400 million people with diabetes worldwide.
[to top of second column] |
A safe and effective oral insulin, if approved, is expected to
become a multibillion-dollar product.
The main attraction of an insulin pill, aside from avoiding
injections, is that it comes much closer to the path of natural
insulin, which is produced in the pancreas and goes directly to the
liver. ORMD-0801 goes from the gut to the liver, while injected
insulin circulates throughout the body before it gets there.
Some doctors believe high levels of insulin circulating through the
rest of the body may increase health risks.
(Reporting by Bill Berkrot; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|