Hydrogels for Local and Long Term Release of Biologics. A platform technology with hydrogels that can sustain and localize antibody/protein release for several weeks.

About

Background Protein and antibody therapeutics are becoming an increasingly prevalent class of drugs due to their selectivity and potency compared to small molecule drugs. However, administration and delivery are challenging due to their pharmacokinetic properties such as uptake at disease sites, half-life, tissue distribution, elimination. Currently, repeated and frequent intravenous doses or infusions are required to achieve therapeutic benefit. For example, bispecifics are continually infused for several weeks. Therefore, there is a need for improved methods of delivery for these protein and antibody therapeutics. Technology Overview Hydrogels are an ideal vehicle for drug delivery since they are injectable, biocompatible and hold large drug payloads with enhanced protein stability. Currently, their use clinically has been limited because they only marginally decrease injection frequency. Researchers at McMaster have developed a platform technology with hydrogels that can sustain and localize antibody/protein release for several weeks. Ongoing work with this platform technology includes preclinical mouse studies in a glioblastoma model. Stage of Development: • Proof of principle data available. • Planned pre-clinical studies in tumor model. #17-002

Key Benefits

• Hydrogels drug release mechanism prevents drug loss from injection site, ensuring proper dose of drug is administered and concentration is maintained for longer periods of time, leading to extended therapeutic benefit • Reduced injection frequency, thereby increasing patient compliance, lowering healthcare costs and minimizing risk of infections and systemic side effects • Local injections concentrate drugs at disease sites, thereby reducing adverse events experienced with systemic delivery of drugs • Point source of drug infusion is optimally placed within the body

Applications

Any treatment requiring local and long-term delivery of a macromolecule (e.g. antibody, bispecific, protein), for example, retinal degenerative diseases, pain medication, cancer

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