U.S. approves digital
pill that tracks when patients take it
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[November 14, 2017] (Reuters)
- U.S. regulators have approved the first
digital pill with an embedded sensor to track if patients are taking
their medication properly, marking a significant step forward in the
convergence of healthcare and technology.
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The medicine is a version of Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co Ltd's
established drug Abilify for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and
depression, containing a tracking device developed by Proteus
Digital Health.
The system offers doctors an objective way to measure if patients
are swallowing their pills on schedule, opening up a new avenue for
monitoring medicine compliance that could be applied in other
therapeutic areas.
Shares in Otsuka rose 2.5 percent on Tuesday after news of the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) late on Monday.
The FDA said that being able to track ingestion of medicines
prescribed for mental illness may be useful "for some patients",
although the ability of the digital pill to improve patient
compliance had not been proved.
"The FDA supports the development and use of new technology in
prescription drugs and is committed to working with companies to
understand how technology might benefit patients and prescribers,"
said Mitchell Mathis of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and
Research.
The system works by sending a message from the pill's sensor to a
wearable patch, which then transmits the information to a mobile
application so that patients can track the ingestion of the
medication on their smartphone.
About the size of a grain of salt, the sensor has no battery or
antenna and is activated when it gets wet from stomach juices. That
completes a circuit between coatings of copper and magnesium on
either side, generating a tiny electric charge.
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In the longer term, such digital pills could also be used to manage
patients with other complicated medicine routines, such as those
suffering from diabetes or heart conditions.
Poor compliance with drug regimens is a common problem in many
disease areas, especially when patients suffer from chronic
conditions.
Proteus has been working on the pill tracking system for many years
and the sensor used in Abilify MyCite was first cleared for use by
the FDA in 2012.
The unlisted Californian company has attracted investments from
several large healthcare companies, including Novartis AG, Medtronic
Inc and St. Jude Medical Inc, as well as Otsuka.
Abilify MyCite is not approved to treat patients with
dementia-related psychosis and contains a boxed warning alerting
health care professionals that elderly patients with
dementia-related psychosis treated with antipsychotic drugs are at
an increased risk of death.
(Reporting by Vibhuti Sharma and Ben Hirschler, Editing by Rosalba
O'Brien and Louise Heavens)
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