Subcutaneous Bioavailability of biologics is unpredictable and variable – scores have been seen as low as 49% and as high as 90%. There is a gap in translation of data from in-vitro to preclinical to clinical with regards to bioavailability after SC administration. Building predictive in-silico, in-vitro or preclinical in-vivo models will help reliably predict human absorption/ bioavailability for SC products in relation to dose during development. The predictability will inform molecule and product design and a more streamlined development of SC large molecule dosage forms.
Desired Future State
There is an established industry-wide understanding of fundamental model predictability and bioavailability performance throughout development, that ultimately accelerates SC product development and optimizes product design to ensure clinical success
Biggest Accomplishments in 2023
First RFP for SC Consortium translated to Collaboration with Joanneum/ BioNotus – In-vivo studies completed and preliminary model has been developed
Shared key learnings including legal framework for future RFPs
Technology areas scouted to focus scope of future RFPs
Impact of 2023 Tactics: Bioavailability Sub-Team
In 2023, the Bioavailability Sub-Team championed the first RFP for the SC consortium which was focused on evaluating a translatable in-situ pig model along with mechanistic in-silico models for predicting clinical subcutaneous bioavailability. Biovailability Sub-Team co-leads Sachin Mittal (Merck & co, Inc) and Manuel Sanchez-Felix (Halozyme) also presented at the CRS-IPEC workshop and CRS 2023 Annual Meeting, respectively on Subcutaneous product development opportunity and challenges with specific focus on bioperformance