A new concept in bone regeneration: Instructive Bone Graft AttraX – Progentix Orthobiology BV
Submitting Institution
Queen Mary, University of LondonUnit of Assessment
General EngineeringSummary Impact Type
TechnologicalResearch Subject Area(s)
Engineering: Biomedical Engineering
Medical and Health Sciences: Clinical Sciences
Summary of the impact
Research by Professor Joost de Bruijn and team at QMUL from 2004 was
critical to demonstrating the efficacy and commercial viability of a novel
Instructive Bone Graft (IBG) product, AttraXTM. The technology,
commercialised via the spin-out business Progentix Orthobiology BV
(founded in 2007) was sufficiently mature by 2008 to attract series A
investment of €1 million series A financing by BioGeneration Ventures. The
development of AttraXTM has led to a trade sale totalling up to
US$ 80 million to the global top 5 spine company NuVasive Inc. in 2009. In
2011 an exclusive distribution deal with a global top 3 dental company was
signed for use of the technology in the field of dentistry and
craniomaxillofacial surgery. After regulatory approval of AttraXTM
in Europe (CE mark), the product was commercialised in 2011 and has been
used successfully in more than eleven thousand patients (as of 2013Q3)
with global reach (including EU, US, Australia, New Zealand and Brazil).
Within 1 year of commercialisation, a 1.1% share of the estimated US$2
billion global spinal bone graft market has been achieved. This research
has seen an economical benefit in terms of newly formed jobs from 2 FTE in
2008 to 25 FTE in 2013 at Progentix Orthobiology BV.
Underpinning research
Until the early 1990's synthetic bone replacement materials were solely
used as scaffolds to guide bone growth along their surface
(osteoconduction). Due to their limited bone repair potential, they could
only be used to fill small bone defects. For the treatment of larger,
clinically relevant bone defects, materials with bone inducing properties
(osteoinduction) are required. Although the only option available to
surgeons was the use of patient-own bone tissue harvested from other
locations in the body (with associated complications) or the use of
expensive drug-based therapies.
From the mid-1990's onward Prof de Bruijn has been conducting research
aimed at developing synthetic bone replacement materials that have
bone-inducing properties, termed Instructive Bone Graft (IBG). The
successful translation of such materials delivers significant clinical
impact by providing a complication free alternative to conventional
therapies. In 2004 Prof de Bruijn accepted a full-time position at QMUL,
as Chair of Biomaterials, and he also established the company Xpand
Biotechnology BV1 through a government start-up grant via the
University of Twente, the Netherlands. A research partnership between
Xpand Biotechnology BV and QMUL was established with the company funding
two research positions at QMUL in 2004 that focussed on development of
novel IBG products, with a further position funded by QMUL.
The research on IBGs focussed on understanding and unravelling the
process of material-induced bone formation. Prof de Bruijn and team showed
that inflammation plays a role in ectopic bone formation (i.e. bone
induction), facilitated by surface microstructured materials. They further
showed that calcium phosphate materials with a specific submicron grain
size and microporosity induce bone formation and lead to clinically
relevant bone healing in defects that otherwise do not heal [1,2]. The
involvement of macrophages in the earliest inflammatory phase was shown to
play a role in mesenchymal stem cell homing and osteogenic differentiation
when grown on these microstructured materials [3]. The research at QMUL
was extended to demonstrate that the IBG technologies are at least
equivalent in bone regeneration to the gold standard autologous
(patient-own) bone and drug-based therapies (human recombinant bone
morphogenetic protein 2 - rhBMP2), thereby demonstrating the clinical and
commercial viability of the research [4-6].
Due to upcoming Series A financing (€1 million funding by BioGeneration
Ventures in 2008), Progentix Orthobiology BV was founded in 2007 with Prof
de Bruijn as founder and CEO to commercialise the IBG technology. Further,
the successful outcomes of the IBG studies led Prof de Bruijn to reduce
his commitment at QMUL to 0.2 FTE and focus more on the growth of
Progentix Orthobiology BV. Preclinical efficacy studies have shown that
the IBG technology is excellent for use in spinal fusion, which represents
about 50% of the US$5 billion bone graft market. A 100% spinal fusion was
obtained after 3 months of implantation compared to at least 6 or 12
months for other competitive synthetic bone replacement materials and
technologies. Clinical safety studies in patients with palatal cleft
defects showed that the IBGs are fully resorbed and replaced by bone
tissue after 12 months of implantation. Eventually, the QMUL research
formed the basis of not only VC funding but also of the US$80 million
trade sale of Progentix Orthobiology BV to NuVasive Inc. and the signing
of an exclusive distribution deal with a global top 3 dental company.
1 Progentix BV until 2007 - note that Progentix Orthobiology
BV, established in 2007, is an entirely separate company
References to the research
1. Yuan H, van Blitterswijk CA, de Groot K, de Bruijn JD. A comparison of
bone formation in biphasic calcium phosphate (BCP) and hydroxyapatite (HA)
implanted in muscle and bone of dogs at different time periods. J
Biomed. Mater Res A. 78(1):139-147 (2006).
2. Yuan H, van Blitterswijk CA, de Groot K, de Bruijn JD. Cross-species
Comparison of Ectopic Bone Formation in Biphasic Calcium Phosphate (BCP)
and Hydroxyapatite (HA) Scaffolds. Tissue Engineering 12(6):1607-1615
(2006).
3. Eniwumide, JO, Yuan, H; Cartmell, SH; Meijer, GJ; de Bruijn, JD.
Ectopic bone formation in bone marrow stem cell seeded calcium phosphate
scaffolds as compared to autograft and (cell seeded) allograft. European
Cells & Materials 14:30-38 (2007).
4. Yuan H, Fernandes H, Habibovic P, de Boer J, Barradas AM, de Ruiter A,
Walsh WR, van Blitterswijk CA, de Bruijn JD, Osteoinductive ceramics as a
synthetic alternative to autologous bone grafting, Proc Natl Acad Sci U S
A. 107(31):13614-13619 (2010).
5. Yuan H, Fernandes H, Habibovic P, de Boer J, Barradas AM, de Ruiter A,
Walsh WR, van Blitterswijk CA, de Bruijn JD, `Smart' biomaterials and
osteoinductivity, Nat Rev Rheumatol, 7(4)-c1 (2011).
6. Barbieri D, Yuan H, de Groot F, Walsh WR, de Bruijn JD, Influence of
Different Polymeric Gels on the Ectopic Bone Forming Ability of an
Osteoinductive Biphasic Calcium Phosphate Ceramic, Acta Biomater.
7(5):2007-2014 (2011).
Funding:
• €1 million series A financing to Progentix Orthobiology BV by
BioGeneration Ventures (2008).
• US$80 million deal with NuVasive Inc. to acquire all stock of Progentix
Orthobiology based on reaching certain milestones (2009).
• Several Dutch and EU grants to Progentix for developing the
osteoinductive ceramics technology, amounting to more than €5 million in
the past 8 years.
Details of the impact
Research conducted by Prof deBruijn (QMUL from 2004 onwards) has been
critical to the success of a start-up business Progentix Orthobiology BV
(founded in 2007) and its revolutionary new IBG product AttraXTM.
Significant impact has been generated from 2008 onwards. Economic impact
includes venture capital funding (2008 - €1 million from BioGeneration
Ventures — Section 5, source 2) and commercial deals with the leading
global spinal surgery device company NuVasive Inc (2009 - up to US$80
million trade sale — Section 5, source 3) and a dental (2011) market
leader to market AttraXTM and other related products. Since
2011 AttraXTM has been used successfully in more than eleven
thousand patients (as of 2013Q3) with global reach demonstrating impact on
health and welfare. Within 1 year of commercialisation, a 1.1% share of
the estimated US$2 billion global spinal bone graft market had been
achieved. This research has seen an economical benefit in terms of new
jobs at Progentix Orthobiology BV with an increase in staff from 2 FTE in
2008 to 25 FTE in 2013.
Improved Instructive Bone Graft AttraXTM —
impacting unmet clinical and commercial need
There is an unmet clinical and commercial need for a product with the same
effectiveness as the gold standard autograft but without its
disadvantages. Current alternatives to autograft have major drawbacks such
as immune reactions, disease transfer, regulatory constraints, limited
efficacy and high costs. AttraXTM, developed with QMUL
underpinning research and marketed under an agreement worth up to US$80
million from NuVasive Inc., delivers impact on the unmet clinical and
commercial need as its bone regeneration potential is in line with that of
the clinical gold standard autograft and bone growth factor rhBMP2 InfuseTM
(annual sales totaling US$1 billion) and superior to other synthetic
biomaterials [Section 5, sources 4,5]. Further it is more cost-effective
than InfuseTM. AttraXTM is targeted at the US$5
billion global orthopaedic bone graft market as a substitute of autologous
bone, initially impacting the US$2 billion spinal market, representing
approx. 1 million procedures per annum [Section 5, source 6]. Since the
introduction to market of AttraXTM at the end of 2011, more
than eleven thousand patients have been treated (as of 2013Q3) spread
across the world (including EU, US, Australia, New Zealand and Brazil).
Within 1 year of commercialisation, AttraXTM had attained rapid
market penetration equivalent to 1.1% share of the estimated US$2 billion
global spinal bone graft market [Section 5, sources 7,8]. The approval of
a putty formulation in the US in 2014 will allow full scale rollout in the
home-market of NuVasive and should lead to a 10% market share within 2
years with a potential to grow to >25% in the coming 5-8 years.
Delivering health impact to patients
AttraXTM has delivered significant benefit to over 11,000
patients who have received the product since it was introduced in 2011.
The impact relates firstly to benefit to patients compared to the
autograft gold-standard procedure where bone taken from one area of the
patient and placed at the defect site resulting in two operative sites.
AttraXTM delivers similar performance to autograft but without
the disadvantages, which include significant post-operative pain at the
graft donor site in over 30% of patients, which can last for 2 years or
more in some patients. Treatment with AttraXTM further reduces
the risk of revision surgery as the synthetic product has greater
reliability compared to living autograft. The simpler and quicker AttraXTM
operative procedure ensures more rapid recovery, with less time in
hospital and a more rapid return to full activity and work for patients,
when compared to autograft. There are also potential safety benefits to
patients when compared to the rhBMP2 growth factor product InfuseTM,
with current concerns over significant side effects of InfuseTM
reported.
Delivering economic/commercial impact and changing clinical practice
The development of AttraXTM has already generated major
economic and commercial impact, summarised as follows:
- Supporting the establishment of a company, Progentix Orthobiology BV
to commercialise the product.
- Attracting significant venture capital investment for the development.
- Securing a trade sale worth up to US$80 million from NuVasive to
obtained exclusive worldwide distribution rights for spinal treatment.
- Securing an exclusive distribution deal with a global top 3 dental
company for use of the technology in the field of dentistry and
craniomaxillofacial surgery.
- Generating new jobs, with Progentix Orthobiology BV employing 25 FTE
staff in 2013, compared to 2 FTE in 2008.
In health economics terms the use of AttraXTM delivers
significant savings compared to autograft or InfuseTM as
follows. Compared to the clinical gold standard autograft, AttraXTM
delivers:
- A reduction in length of the operation compared to autograft,
estimated at approximately 40 minutes, resulting in a saving of
approximately £800 per operation.
- Reduced post-operative hospital stay, typically 2-3 days less with a
saving cost of approx. £225 per day.
- Reduced post-operative complications, and revision surgery, which
costs approx. £5,000.
The product cost for AttraXTM (approx. US$1,500 for one spinal
level) is considerably lower than other products with similar reported
efficacy, such as InfuseTM (US$4,000) or Osteocel (allograft
plus stem cells - US$3,500).
The commercial partnership between Progentix Orthobiology BV and NuVasive
Inc is being used to impact clinical practice as a synthetic bone graft is
now available that is as effective as the gold standard autologous bone
graft and more cost-effective and safe than the growth factor rhBMP2
(InfuseTM). The recent agreement with a global top 3 dental
company for use of the technology in the field of dentistry and
craniomaxillofacial surgery will impact practice within these clinical
specialisms that relate to more than 1.5 million procedures annually.
Sources to corroborate the impact
- www.progentix.com
-
http://www.investegate.co.uk/article.aspx?id=20080122075500NT248.
Aspect corroborated: €1 million series A financing to Progentix
Orthobiology BV by BioGeneration Ventures.
-
http://www.progentix.com/Progentix_NUVA_Release_FINAL_adj.pdf.
Aspect corroborated: US$80 million deal with NuVasive Inc. to acquire
all stock of Progentix Orthobiology based on reaching certain milestones
(2009).
- Yuan H, Fernandes H, Habibovic P, de Boer J, Barradas AM, de Ruiter A,
Walsh WR, van Blitterswijk CA, de Bruijn JD, Osteoinductive ceramics as
a synthetic alternative to autologous bone grafting, Proc Natl Acad Sci
U S A. 107(31):13614-13619 (2010), PMID: 20643969
- Yuan H, Fernandes H, Habibovic P, de Boer J, Barradas AM, de Ruiter A,
Walsh WR, van Blitterswijk CA, de Bruijn JD, `Smart' biomaterials and
osteoinductivity, Nat Rev Rheumatol, 7(4)-c1 (2011) doi:10.1038/nrrheum,
PMID: 21584973
- World Wide, US, EU and UK Bone replacement Markets. SmartTrak.net
August 2013, BiomedGPS, LLC, USA
- Professor of Tissue Regeneration, MIRA Institute, Twente University,
The Netherlands. Aspect corroborated: Improved Instructive Bone Graft
AttraXTM — impacting unmet clinical and commercial need.
Delivering health impact to patients. Delivering economic/commercial
impact and changing clinical practice.
- Chairman of the Board, Progentix Orthobiology BV, BioGeneration
Ventures, The Netherlands. Aspect corroborated: Improved Instructive
Bone Graft AttraXTM — impacting unmet clinical and commercial
need. Delivering health impact to patients. Delivering
economic/commercial impact and changing clinical practice.