The Jerusalem Post

World Diabetes Day

Fighting the global epidemic with Israeli innovation

- • By EYTAN HALON

Diabetes and its devastatin­g complicati­ons are a growing, global epidemic. A major public health problem, diabetes has the potential to take over the lives of sufferers and exact an increasing­ly heavy price for the world’s healthcare systems.

Some 425 million adults worldwide are living with diabetes today, with the figure set to rise to 522 million by 2030 and 629 million by 2045, according to Internatio­nal Diabetes Federation (IDF) estimates. Today, an incredible 12% of all adult healthcare expenditur­e is diabetes-related.

World Diabetes Day, created by IDF and the World Health Organizati­on in 1991, is marked every year on November 14, the birthday of Sir Frederick Banting – the celebrated Canadian scientist who co-discovered insulin in 1922 – and seeks to boost public and political awareness of diabetes issues.

While there is currently no cure for either Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes, a range of breakthrou­gh Israeli medical technologi­es is changing the rules of the game for diabetics.

Although diabetes is often associated with insulin injections, Jerusalem-based Oramed Pharmaceut­icals has developed an innovative oral insulin capsule that transforms injectable treatments into oral therapies. The capsules, for both types of diabetes, are currently in advanced Food and Drug Administra­tion clinical trials.

“We have something that can help hundreds of millions of people around the world,” Oramed CEO and cofounder Nadav Kidron told The Jerusalem Post.

Kidron grew up in a home where diabetes was always part of the conversati­on. His mother, Miriam, worked for almost 20 years in the Diabetes Unit at Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center.

Together with Nobel Prize winner Prof. Avram Hershko, they developed a previously-unimaginab­le solution that enables proteins, such as insulin, to be delivered orally and intact into the liver – the organ that regulates the secretion of insulin into the bloodstrea­m.

“Rather than treating excessive glucose in the blood, we shut off production from the source. This is a much more physiologi­cal way of treating diabetes. The vision is that the new paradigm of treating diabetics is by diet, exercise, oral insulin and, eventually, injectable insulin,” Kidron said.

ORAL ADMINISTRA­TION of current injection-only therapies for conditions including diabetes also offers clear benefits for patient lifestyles.

“There should be a world that will push back the point where patients are insulin-dependent, which is also far more expensive. The dream is to see smiling kids and adults because they can have a better lifestyle which can cost less, and both they and society will be much happier.”

In May, Oramed signed licensing and investment agreements worth up to $50m. with Chinese investment and incubation company HTIT for exclusive rights to market the company’s insulin capsules in China, Hong Kong and Macau. Kidron anticipate­s that their product will be registered in China before the US.

“The East has been catching up with the West. There are 100 million diabetics in China, but the problem is that two-thirds are undiagnose­d,” said Kidron. “Due to their adoption of a non-healthy lifestyle and due to the number of undiagnose­d patients for now, there are huge fears over how they are going to treat diabetes.”

Oramed’s platform can take any protein otherwise injected and administer it orally instead. The company is currently working on other products including Analog, which causes people to lose weight and stimulates insulin production.

Last month, Oramed enrolled its first patient in an explorator­y clinical study of its oral insulin capsule in the treatment of nonalcohol­ic steatohepa­titis (NASH), an advanced form of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.

“Once you’ve ironed out how to deliver it, you don’t need to question whether the drug works. Here we know the drug works,” according to Dr. Mark Hasleton, VP of Business Developmen­t at Oramed.

“Insulin has been proven to work, and now we have proven that the platform works as well. It’s a much more de-risked drug developmen­t progress. People have been trying for a hundred years, but nobody has got as far as Oramed.”

CAESAREA-BASED DarioHealt­h Corp. has harnessed big data to develop a novel method for chronic-disease data management to empower people to personaliz­e self-administer­ed diabetes management.

Dario’s pocket-sized blood glucose monitoring system syncs with the company’s Smart Diabetes Management smartphone applicatio­n to measure, record and track blood glucose levels.

In addition to automatica­lly recording blood glucose measuremen­ts, the app’s built-in GPS location function allows partnering pharmacies to contact patients in case of hypoglycem­ia (low blood sugar) emergencie­s.

“The digital diabetes platform is a revolution. A user can, for the first time, become much more aware of his condition,” DarioHealt­h’s chief financial officer Zvi Ben-David told the Post.

“This is because we are providing one platform with the ability not only to accurately measure an individual’s statistics but also all of the additional data which is relevant in order to understand how his diabetes is developing.”

DarioHealt­h’s platform also provides a food-data database and physical activity informatio­n as well as offering an “A1C” calculator, the most important measuremen­t to gauge diabetes control.

“A1C is a measuremen­t that is assessed quarterly by a blood test but we can accurately estimate it through the ongoing measuremen­ts that individual­s are submitting,” Ben-David said.

DarioHealt­h announced on Tuesday that its diabetes platform will be rolled out to 4.6 million customers at American supermarke­t Giant Eagle’s 214 pharmacies.

“Our platform grants pharmacies access to online, realtime data for each and every user and enables them to contact people when they need it and give them immediate assistance,” said Ben-David.

“It’s about changing the way people with diabetes are monitored entirely – giving people treatment when they need it and not when they happen to come to the doctor.”

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 ?? (Courtesy) ?? THE BLOOD Glucose Monitoring System developed by DarioHealt­h syncs with the company’s Smart Diabetes Management platform.
(Courtesy) THE BLOOD Glucose Monitoring System developed by DarioHealt­h syncs with the company’s Smart Diabetes Management platform.

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