Wednesday, April 18, 2007

More Insulin Problems

Pfizer isn't the only company having problems with an alternative delivery form of insulin.

Emisphere Technologies has been working on oral insulin for more than a decade--and finally its board got fed up.

In October 2006, the company reported disappointing Phase II results with its oral insulin--no difference from placebo. The stock tumbled by more than 50%. By January the long-time CEO, Michael Goldberg, MD, was out. The firing was led by Mark Rachesky, who joined Emisphere's board in 2005 when his fund, MHR Institutional Partners, loaned the company $15 million, later changing the straight debt to a convert--at $3.78 a share. That's unprofitably close to the company's current stock price (and less than half the Emisphere price when Rachesky did the covert deal).

Goldberg was blamed for poor execution of the key trial (as well as the fact that the company hasn't made much progress in its nearly nineteen years of life). The original trial design called for the oral insulin to be tested in very sick but stable patients; to accelerate the enrollment, the company apparently relaxed the criteria. In a subsegment look at patients who met the original criteria--an often unreliable analysis--oral insulin apparently did perform well. But now the company needs a new trial to prove the point. And this isn't the first trial that wasn't well executed: its oral heparin test was hurt by a poor liquid formulation whose taste turned off patients.

The company is by no means dead--it's managed to hire a new CEO, Michael Novinski, the former president of Organon USA. And it's brought on a board of big-name diabetologists to advise it on trial design and execution. It's got a new formulation with apparently three times the absorption of the older version--thus reducing cost-of-goods and increasing patient convenience.

But oral insulin won't win on convenience. And it won't win by eliminating the pain of injections. New smaller needles make taking insulin relatively painless. The big advantage will be eliminating embarassment, says one insider: "What diabetics hate is at a restaurant having to pull up their shirt and stick themselves in the stomach with a needle." Exubera doesn't solve that problem: puffing on a big device is no less inconspicuous than sticking one's belly with a needle.

A pill should be a lot more acceptable. And yet that's not enough. The market for insulin reformulations is being shaved by better needle technology and by new products, like the injectable Byetta and the oral Januvia. And as Pfizer is learning from Exubera, managed care doesn't want to pay for convenience. Emisphere's product, to be truly important, will have to show better outcomes. It may be able to get on the market by showing equivalency to injectable insulin--but to make Emisphere, and oral insulin, a success, it will need to keep diabetics healthier, too. That's a much more expensive task than most proponents of oral protein delivery ever figured they'd have to accomplish.





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