Summary
September 2006, Vol. 3, No. 5, Pages 663-675 , DOI 10.1517/17425247.3.5.663

Proprietary Rel-Ease™ drug delivery technology: opportunity for sustained delivery of peptides, proteins and small molecules

Ming Ye1, Gajanan Bhat2, Kevin A Johnston3, Heow Tan4 & Marc Garnick5
1Associate Director of Pharmaceutics and Drug Delivery Technology, Praecis Pharmaceuticals Inc., 830 Winter Street, Waltham, MA 02451, USA.
2Director of Biometrics, Praecis Pharmaceuticals Inc., 830 Winter Street, Waltham, MA 02451, USA
3Associate Director of Pharmaceutical Development and Analytical Technology, Praecis Pharmaceuticals Inc., 830 Winter Street, Waltham, MA 02451, USA
4Vice President of Development and Industrial Operations, Praecis Pharmaceuticals Inc., 830 Winter Street, Waltham, MA 02451, USA
5Chief Medical Officer, Praecis Pharmaceuticals Inc., 830 Winter Street, Waltham, MA 02451, USA
Author for correspondence



Proprietary Rel-Ease™ (Praecis Pharmaceuticals) drug delivery technology uses biocompatible polymers as carriers to incorporate a drug into a polymer matrix through opposite charge interaction or complexation. The resulting low solubility complexes can be used to prepare sustained release depot injections or potentially sustained release formulations for oral administration. As a regulatory approved and commercialised drug delivery technology, Rel-Ease is used in abarelix for injectable suspension, a monthly depot injection for the treatment of patients with advanced prostate cancer. The technology offers high drug loading and minimal-to-no initial burst effect in vivo. It uses aqueous processes and is compatible for complexation with many peptide and protein therapeutics; its mechanism can also be applied to many small-molecule therapeutics and offers conventional and alternative methods for sustained release delivery via an oral route.

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Authors:
Ming Ye
Gajanan Bhat
Kevin A Johnston
Heow Tan
Marc Garnick
Keywords:
biocompatible polymer
depot formulation
high drug loading
low-solubility complex
oral sustained delivery
parenteral sustained delivery
peptides
proteins
small molecules
water-soluble drugs