Bend Research receives polymer additives patent

By Alexandria Pesic

- Last updated on GMT

Related tags Bend research Pharmacology

Bend Research, the Oregon US-based drug manufacturer, has received a new US patent covering the use of polymer additives to help increase the efficacy of low-solubility drugs.

According to the patent, a solubility-improved drug form is combined with a concentration-enhancing polymer additive, resulting in a “substantially enhanced drug concentration” ​with increased bioavailability.

Bend says in contrast, low-solubility drugs often show poor bioavailbility or irregular absorption in patients.

The company claims there is a growing need for this kind of technology as more than 40 per cent of drugs in development have low aqueous solubility. Bend says use of polymer additives means patients will require lower dosages.

“Pharmaceutical industry leaders acknowledge that discovering and bringing these new compounds forward is very complicated,” ​said Bend Research president and CEO, Rod Ray, “and Bend Research scientists and engineers are well known for providing key assistance to leading pharmaceutical companies facing this challenge.”

Drug forms

Bend’s patent covers the use of additive polymers in a number of different drug forms, including nanoparticles, absorbed drugs, drugs in nanosuspensions, supercooled drug melts, gelatine dosage forms and soft gelatine dosage forms.

According to Bend, these drug forms dissolve rapidly in the gastro-intestinal tract before being properly absorbed, but by blending them with a solubility-enhancing polymer high drug concentrations can be sustained through the inhibition of “crystallisation or precipitation of the drug to a lower-solubility form.”

Patents

The new patent, claims Bend, is one of a growing number of formulation and process-related patents associated with its solubility-enhancing drug-formulation technologies. The solubilisation technologies focus on enhancing the concentration of drugs in a patient’s bloodstream to enable faster drug dissolution.

“This technology is on target with our mission of advancing our clients’ best new medicines,” ​explained Ray.

“It provides one more way we can help our customers provide novel therapies to treat illnesses that desperately need new approaches.”

Related news

Show more

Related products

show more

Increasing the Bioavailability of Oncology Drugs

Increasing the Bioavailability of Oncology Drugs

Content provided by Lonza Small Molecules | 13-Nov-2023 | White Paper

Oral tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) are a class of cancer drugs that can be highly susceptible to issues with solubility in the gastrointestinal tract

Pulmonary Delivery of Orally Inhaled Therapeutics

Pulmonary Delivery of Orally Inhaled Therapeutics

Content provided by Catalent Pharma Solutions | 19-Oct-2023 | Business Advice

New classes and indications of orally inhaled therapeutics are rapidly expanding, with the development pipeline increasingly featuring both large and small...

Related suppliers

Follow us

Products

View more

Webinars