The
American Diabetes Association estimates that there are currently 23.6 million diabetics in the U.S. (7.8% of the total population, including 17.9 million diagnosed cases, 5.7 million undiagnosed, and 57 million pre-diabetics. Diabetes results in an estimated $174 billion in costs from diagnosed cases of diabetes in the U.S. (2007). On a global scale, the
International Diabetes Federation (IDF) estimates 285 million diabetics worldwide in 2010. I have outlined some investing opportunities in this article, with a focus on emerging small / micro-cap companies from across the world which are developing innovative therapeutics, diagnostics, and monitoring products to improve the treatment outcomes for the growing, global diabetes epidemic.
Epinex Diagnostics, Inc. (privately held) is dedicated to the development of innovative point-of-care technologies using rapid diagnostic tests. Epinex has developed a proprietary platform for rapid tests that apply existing immunoassay strips and biosensors to create unique quantitative diagnostic tests, focused on a significant initial market opportunity for a new type of diabetes monitoring test that measures glycated albumin (G1a), with an expected FDA 510(k) filing in early 2010 seeking marketing clearance as a Class 2 medical device for an expected review period of 90 days. My 13-page profile report and the most recent corporate profile for Epinex are available to view or download at the BioMedReports.com research downloads section or at the ProActive News Room landing page for Epinex.
Novo Nordisk (NYSE: NVO) is based in Denmark and represents the largest (market cap of US$39.5 billion), globally diversified play on diabetes care, deriving over 73% of total revenue (US$5.6 million / US$7.6 million) during the first nine months of 2009 from this business segment. During the first three quarters of 2009, NVO posed total and diabetes care segment sales growth of 15% (Danish kroner) and 11% (local currencies).
NVO expects to receive formal feedback from the FDA during 4Q09 for its pending Victoza (liraglutide is a once-daily human GLP-1 analogue) New Drug Application (NDA) seeking U.S. marketing approval for the treatment of type 2 diabetes in adults. In early July, the European Commission granted marketing authorization for liraglutide. Victoza is used once-daily via subcutaneous injection, and the drug is a synthetic glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) that works by stimulating insulin release when glucose levels become high.
Another company awaiting a FDA decision for a new diabetes care product is MannKind Corp. (NASDAQ: MNKD), which submitted its NDA in mid-March that is seeking FDA approval of Afresa (insulin monomer human rDNA origin) Inhalation Powder and the AFRESA Inhaler for the treatment of adults with type 1 or type 2 diabetes. The FDA issued a standard, 10-month review for the NDA, with a decision expected in mid-January 2010. Afresa is an ultra rapid-acting form of insulin (achieving peak levels within 12-14 minutes to mimic the normal physiological release of insulin in healthy individuals) that is delivered through an inhaler rather than the typical route of injection by a syringe.
In early October, MNKD announced that it would not be able to sign a partnership deal for Afresa by year-end as it awaits the pending FDA decision, stating that the Company and potential partners will be better able to address appropriate deal terms and structure once the label for Afresa is clarified.