An industry perspective on clinical development and regulatory strategies for subcutaneously administered high-dose biologics
- PMID: 40848765
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2025.114156
An industry perspective on clinical development and regulatory strategies for subcutaneously administered high-dose biologics
Abstract
The Subcutaneous Drug Development and Delivery Consortium aims to advance the technical and regulatory understanding that can enable development of subcutaneous biotherapeutics towards improved outcomes. The Consortium's Clinical Development and Regulatory Strategy sub team conducted a cross-company survey to explore strategies, challenges, and best practices in developing subcutaneous products for high-dose biologics. With the growing prevalence of biologics, subcutaneous delivery is increasingly recognized for its potential to reduce healthcare burdens and enhance treatment convenience in treatment administered by healthcare providers, caregivers or individual users. The survey results indicate that industry participants view high-dose subcutaneous formulations as beneficial for customer-centered care, reducing clinical visits and enabling at-home administration. The primary drivers for subcutaneous development include improved experience with the parenteral dosing regimen, increased adherence, and continuous improvement towards emerging needs (lifecycle management). While companies are increasingly leveraging enabling technologies such as permeation enhancers, high concentration technologies, and wearable devices to resolve technical barriers with delivering high doses subcutaneously, challenges remain. These challenges can range from user acceptance to regulatory complexities with implementation of innovation and clinical strategies. One of the key opportunities identified is the advancement of bridging strategies to transition from intravenous to subcutaneous formulation, informed by pharmacokinetic/ pharmacodynamic modeling and simulation and pharmacokinetic clinical bridging studies. The survey highlights the need for continued collaboration and innovation to optimize subcutaneous high-dose biologic development, aligning industry practices with evolving regulatory and customer-centric demands.
Keywords: Biotherapeutics; Customer-centered drug development; High-dose/large volumes; Subcutaneous drug delivery; Survey results.
Copyright © 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in the paper. The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be constructed as a potential conflict of interest. Gerard Bruin and Marie Picci are employees and stockholders of Novartis. Ryan Nolan and Tania Thomas are employees and stockholders of Halozyme Therapeutics. Beate Bittner is an employee and stockholder of Roche. Shelley Amendola is an employee and stockholder of Sanofi. Dany Doucet is an employee and stockholder of GSK. Sy Gebrekidan and Mitch Zhao are employees and stockholders of J&J. Tanja Novkovic is an employee of Boehringer Ingelheim. Ashlesha Raut is an employee of Merck Sharp & Dohme LLC, a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc. and stockholder of Merck & Co., Inc., Christopher Rini and Peter Skutnik are employees and stockholders of Becton Dickinson.
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