| Literature DB >> 30043229 |
Beate Bittner1, Wolfgang Richter2, Johannes Schmidt3.
Abstract
Subcutaneous delivery of biotherapeutics has become a valuable alternative to intravenous administration across many disease areas. Although the pharmacokinetic profiles of subcutaneous and intravenous formulations differ, subcutaneous administration has proven effective, safe, well-tolerated, generally preferred by patients and healthcare providers and to result in reduced drug delivery-related healthcare costs and resource use. The aim of this article is to discuss the differences between subcutaneous and intravenous dosing from both health-economic and scientific perspectives. The article covers different indications, treatment settings, administration volumes, and injection devices. We focus on biotherapeutics in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), immunoglobulin-replacement therapy in primary immunodeficiency (PI), beta interferons in multiple sclerosis (MS), and monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) in oncology. While most subcutaneous biotherapeutics in RA, PI, and MS are self-administered at home, mAbs for oncology are still only approved for administration in a healthcare setting. Beside concerns around the safety of biotherapeutics in oncology, a key challenge for self-administration in this area is that doses and dosing volumes can be comparatively large; however, this difficulty has recently been overcome to some extent by the development of high-concentration solutions, the use of infusion pumps, and the coadministration of the dispersion enhancer hyaluronidase. Furthermore, given the increasing number of biotherapeutics being considered for combination therapy and the high dosing complexity associated with these, especially when administered intravenously, subcutaneous delivery of fixed-dose combinations might be an alternative that will diminish these burdens on healthcare systems.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30043229 PMCID: PMC6182494 DOI: 10.1007/s40259-018-0295-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BioDrugs ISSN: 1173-8804 Impact factor: 5.807
Fig. 1Overview of methodologies that can facilitate subcutaneous administration of high-dose biotherapeutics. These different techniques can be used alone or in combination
Biologic treatments for subcutaneous administration in rheumatoid arthritis [64, 65]
| Molecule | Brand name (originator) | Dosing frequency | Injection volume | Device |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-TNFα | ||||
| Etanercept | Enbrel (Amgen)a | q1w or twice weekly | 0.5–1 ml | Prefilled syringe, vial, prefilled pen/autoinjector, prefilled cartridge for reusable autoinjector |
| Adalimumab | Humira (AbbVie)a | q2w | 0.4–0.8 ml | Prefilled syringe, vial, prefilled pen |
| Certolizumab pegol | Cimzia (UCB - Euronext and BEL20)a | q2w and q4w | 1 ml | Prefilled syringe, vial, prefilled pen |
| Golimumab | Simponi (Janssen)b | q1m | 0.5–1 ml | Prefilled syringe, prefilled pen/autoinjector |
| Anti-IL-6 | ||||
| Tocilizumab | Actemra (Roche)b | q1w and q2w | 0.9 ml | Prefilled syringe, prefilled pen |
| Sarilumab | Kevzara (Sanofi-Aventis)a | q2w | 1.14 ml | Prefilled syringe, prefilled pen |
| Anti-IL-1 | ||||
| Anakinra | Kineret (Swedish Orphan Biovitrum GmbH)a | q1d or q2d | 0.67 ml | Prefilled syringe |
| Selective co-stimulating modulator | ||||
| Abatacept | Orencia (Bristol-Myers Squibb)b | q1w | 1 ml | Prefilled syringe, prefilled pen/autoinjector |
TNF tumor necrosis factor, IL interleukin, qXw once every X weeks, qXd once every X days, qXm once every X months
aOnly a subcutaneous formulation marketed
bBoth subcutaneous and intravenous formulations marketed
Beta interferons and glatiramer acetate for subcutaneous administration in multiple sclerosis [64, 65]
| Molecule | Brand name (originator) | Dosing frequency | Injection volume | Device |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interferon | ||||
| Interferon beta-1b | Betaseron/Betaferon (Bayer) | q2d | 0.25–1 ml | Prefilled syringea, vial, autoinjector |
| Extavia (Novartis) | q2d | 0.25–1 ml | Prefilled syringea, vial, autoinjector | |
| Peg-interferon beta-1a | Plegridy (Biogen) | q2w | 0.5 ml | Prefilled syringe, prefilled pen/autoinjector |
| Interferon beta-1a | Rebif (EMD Serono/Pfizer) | Three times per week | 0.2–0.5 ml | Prefilled syringe, prefilled pen/autoinjector, electronic injection system |
| Glatiramer acetate | ||||
| Glatiramer acetate | Copaxone (Teva) | q1d or three times per week | 1 ml | Prefilled syringe, pen/autoinjector |
qXd once every X days, qXw once every X weeks
aPrefilled diluent syringe with vial
Monoclonal antibodies for subcutaneous administration in oncology [64, 65]
| Molecule | Brand name (originator) | Dosing frequency | Injection volume | Device |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-HER2 mAb | ||||
| Trastuzumab | Herceptin (Roche)a,b | q3w | 5 ml | Vial and syringe |
| Anti-CD20 mAb | ||||
| Rituximab | MabThera/Rituxan Hycela (Roche)a,b | q3w–q3mc | 11.7–13.4 ml | Vial and syringe |
CD cluster of differentiation, HER human epidermal growth factor receptor, mAb monoclonal antibody, qXw once every X weeks, qXm once every X months
aSubcutaneous and intravenous formulation marketed
bSubcutaneous formulation contains recombinant human hyaluronidase (rHuPH20)
cDepending on the type of follicular lymphoma
| Complex and invasive intravenous administration of biotherapeutics, typically conducted in clinic, contributes to the pressure on healthcare systems. Subcutaneous administration has been shown to be a safe and efficacious dosing alternative that is generally valued by both patients and healthcare professionals. |
| The development of fixed-dose subcutaneous formulations that are delivered independent of patient body weight, technologies that facilitate the injection of dosing volumes > 5 ml, and devices that allow self-administration outside of the hospital setting have all markedly contributed to shifting care to the home setting. |
| Many biotherapeutics are being investigated for combination therapy; subcutaneous administration could further simplify drug delivery with the development of fixed-dose combinations or ready-to-use devices that deliver two or more biotherapeutics via one single subcutaneous injection. |