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Ferring and BioInnovation Institute announce collaboration to advance innovation in women’s health
The collaboration aims to bridge the health gap by supporting early-stage innovation
The Swiss pharma company Ferring and the BioInnovation Institute have entered a strategic collaboration to accelerate innovation in women’s health.
BioInnovation Institute Foundation (BII) and Ferring have expanded their collaboration with the objective to advance life science innovation within women’s health.
New activities will include supporting BII to source, and potentially fund and incubate early-stage start-ups and projects within the field of reproductive medicine.
“The new strategic collaboration, highlights Ferring’s continued commitment to invest in early-stage innovation in this area, and we look forward to strengthening our collaboration with BII to accelerate new solutions for patients,” says Armin Metzger, executive vice president and chief science officer at Ferring.
The collaboration aims to build on Ferring’s engagement with BII’s Women’s Health Initiative through Ferring’s membership on the BII Women’s Health Innovation Panel.
Recent data shows women’s health remains an underserved field, with as little as one per cent of global healthcare research funding is invested in female-specific conditions beyond oncology.
Metzger says Ferring’s new collaboration aims to bridge the gap by supporting early-stage innovation, leveraging BII’s expertise in translational science incubation, together with Ferring’s expertise in early-stage development and reproductive medicine.
“Combining BII’s already proven incubation expertise with the industrial expertise and deep insights that Ferring has within women’s health forms a very strong basis for supporting and accelerating our mission of getting more solutions on the market that address the high unmet needs of 50 per cent of the world’s population,” adds Trine Bartholdy, chief innovation officer at the BioInnovation Institute.
“We are pleased to collaborate even closer with Ferring to make it happen.”
Per Falk, Ferring Pharmaceuticals president, has previously highlighted the importance of investing in women’s healthcare and reducing maternal mortality rates.
In an interview with ETHealthworld, he said: “We have an opportunity as a company to play an important role here, to address the innovation in access and we do that by using our unique innovations with therapies that can address the problem of postpartum haemorrhage and work with those who have presence on the ground where the therapy is needed to make sure that women can get access where they needed, wherever they are, however remote it is.”
Insight
Topical HRT protects bone density in women with period loss – study
Transdermal HRT best protects bone density in women with functional hypothalamic amenorrhoea, a condition that stops periods, a review of trials has found.
The meta-analysis pooled randomised clinical trials involving 692 participants and found transdermal hormone replacement therapy and teriparatide increased bone mineral density by between 2 and 13 per cent.
Functional hypothalamic amenorrhoea can follow anorexia or intense exercise. Bone mineral density measures bone strength and the amount of mineral in bone.
Around half of women with the condition have low bone mineral density, compared with about 1 per cent of healthy women, and their fracture risk is up to seven times higher.
The research was conducted by scientists at Imperial College London and Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust.
Professor Alexander Comninos, senior author of the study and consultant endocrinologist at the trust, said: “Bone density is lost very rapidly in FHA and so addressing bone health early is very important to reduce the lifelong risk of fractures.
“Our study provides much needed comparisons of all the available treatments from all available studies.
“Clearly the best treatment is to restore normal menstrual cycles and therefore oestrogen levels through various psychological, nutritional or exercise interventions – but that is not always possible.
“The foundation for bone health is good calcium and vitamin D intake (through diet and/or supplements) but we have additional treatments that are more effective.”
When FHA is diagnosed, clinicians first try to restore periods through lifestyle measures, including psychological and dietary support, but these can fail. Guidelines then recommend giving oestrogen, though the best form was unclear.
The team reviewed all prior randomised trials comparing therapies, including oral and transdermal oestrogen, and also assessed teriparatide, a prescription bone-building drug used for severe osteoporosis.
They found no significant benefit for oral contraceptive pills or oral hormone therapy.
A recent UK audit reported that about a quarter of women with anorexia-related FHA are prescribed the oral contraceptive pill for bone loss; the study suggests using transdermal therapy instead.
Comninos said: “Our goal is simple: to help women receive the right treatment sooner and to protect their bone health in the long-term.
“We hope this study provides clinicians with better evidence to choose transdermal oestrogen when prescribing oestrogen and so inform future practice guidelines.
“Right now, millions of women with FHA may not be receiving the best treatments for their bone health.”
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