Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.

Beyond the drug: Closing the knowledge gap for injectable diabetes meds
Pharma Voice · aprott via Getty Images

In This Article:

This story was originally published on PharmaVoice. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily PharmaVoice newsletter.

Despite the decades of R&D and billions spent to bring game-changing drugs like GLP-1s to market, efforts to make sure patients inject the drugs properly have come up short.

While prescriptions for updated diabetes medications have skyrocketed, education about injection techniques have fallen by the wayside, said Pasha Javadi, senior director of medical affairs at Embecta, a Becton Dickinson spinoff that specializes in syringes and pen needles for people with diabetes.

“Insulin, and recently GLP-1s, are treating millions of people with diabetes, and usually many people don’t get the full benefit of those,” Javadi said. “The key subject most healthcare practitioners talk about is the drug and the treatment side — the injection part of administering the drug to the body is most of the time overlooked or considered a given.”

Javadi and a group of diabetes specialists from around the world recently updated the best practices for insulin and noninsulin injection techniques originally published in 2016 for a more comprehensive and accessible standard across diabetes medications.

And for drugmakers relying on clinical and real-world results bolstering prescriptions and sales of their products, standardized procedures and education for injections could not only make a difference for their patients but also for the future of their medicines.

“By changing the practice even a little bit, you can significantly increase [blood glucose] reduction, which comes at zero cost,” Javadi said. “And since 2016, there [have been] so many different changes not only on the technology side, but from the drug perspective.”

In today’s world of shifting diabetes practices, structured training for healthcare professionals and education for patients are both critical to getting the most out of standbys like insulin and newer options like GLP-1s.

Adapting to the new norm

Updates made by the Forum for Injection Technique and Therapy Expert Recommendations, or FITTER, were based on new tech and drugs, but were also created to improve communication to healthcare professionals as they convey cutting-edge diabetes treatment procedures to their patients.

“One of the key questions out there for GLP-1s is that people receiving it have never had any education on the injection techniques,” Javadi said. “And not all needles and not all syringes are equal in a way that impacts people’s injection experience and also their glycemic control.”