| Literature DB >> 35396965 |
Dirk Dressler1, Eric A Johnson2.
Abstract
Although botulinum toxin (BT) is now being used in a large number of different indications in numerous medical specialties, there is still dynamic and rapid development. Treatment algorithms were improved by the introduction of BT short-interval therapy, BT high-dose therapy and improved dosing guidelines. Ultrasound guidance may be helpful in special situations. New indication areas including depression and inflammatory processes are being explored. Drug development projects are mainly focusing on onabotulinumtoxinA analogues, some are addressing liquid preparations and modifications of BT's duration of action. Recombinant BT may simplify production processes. Cell-based assays for potency measurement will soon be required by registration authorities. Treatment algorithms will be further refined and indications will be expanded. New indication areas are still uncertain. BT type A will remain the drug substance of choice. Removal of complexing proteins seems logical. Whether there is a need for BT drugs with modified duration of action and for liquid preparations, is unclear. Bringing BT therapy to those who need it, is the biggest challenge. Current high-price business models need to be changed, either by employing a biosimilar registration approach or by referring to companies from countries where business models are based on different cost structures.Entities:
Keywords: Botulinum toxin; Drugs; Future developments; Indications; Manufacturers; Therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35396965 PMCID: PMC9188496 DOI: 10.1007/s00702-022-02494-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neural Transm (Vienna) ISSN: 0300-9564 Impact factor: 3.850
Fig. 1The genealogy of botulinum toxin drugs. From: Dressler (2012)
Therapeutic botulinum toxin preparations
| Generic name | Trade name | Manufacturers and partners (past and present) | Country | Specifics |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OnabotulinumtoxinA | Botox Botox® Cosmetics® Vistabel® | Allergan-AbbVie | USA/Ireland | BT-A |
| AbobotulinumtoxinA | Dysport® Azzalure® Reloxin® | Ipsen/Medicis | UK/France/USA | BT-A |
| IncobotulinumtoxinA | Xeomin® Xeomin Cosmetics® Bocouture® | Merz Pharmaceuticals | Germany | BT-A, no complexing proteins |
| RimabotulinumtoxinB | NeuroBloc® Myobloc® Nerbloc® | US WorldMeds/ Eisai/Sloan/Elan/Solstice | USA | BT-B, liquid preparation |
| LanbotulinumtoxinA | Hengli® Lantox® Lanzox® CBTX-A® Prosigne® Redux® Liftox® Dituroxal® | Lanzhou Institute of Biological Products/Hugh Source | P.R. China | BT-A, Botox® analogon |
Neuronox® Meditoxin® Botulift® Cunox® | Medytox | R. Korea | BT-A, Botox® analogon | |
| Coretox® | Medytox | R. Korea | BT-A, Xeomin® analogon, no complexing proteins, no biological excipients | |
| Innotox® | Medytox/Allergan | R. Korea/USA | BT-A, liquid preparation | |
Botulax® Zentox® Regenox® | Hugel | R. Korea | ||
| PrabotulinumtoxinA | Nabota® Jeuveau® Evosyal® | Daewong/Evolus-Alphaeon | R. Korea/USA | BT-A, Botox® analogon |
| DaxibotulinumtoxinA | RTT150 | Revance | USA | BT-A, protein additive |
| Revance/Mylan | USA/Netherlands | BT-A, Botox® analogon, biosimilar approach | ||
| Relatox® | Microgen | Russia | BT-A, Botox® analogon | |
| Botulax® | Hugel | R. Korea | BT-A, Botox® analogon | |
| Masport® | Masoundarou | I.R. Iran | BT-A, Dysport® analogon | |
| CosmeTox® | Transdermal | USA | BT-A, creme | |
| BTXA® | Intas | India | BT-A, Botox® analogon | |
| Botogenie | BioMed | India | BT-A, Botox® analogon | |
| EB-001 | Bonti/Allergan | USA | BT-E | |
| MCL005 | Malvern Cosmeceuticals | UK | BT-A, topic gel | |
| ANT-1207 | Anterios/Allergan | USA | BT-A, lotion |
From: Dressler 2021