Journalist

Park Boram
  • Korean Pharma-Bio Briefing: Kolon Life Science, Daewoong, Celltrion, Daewon, Samsung Medical Center
    Korean Pharma-Bio Briefing: Kolon Life Science, Daewoong, Celltrion, Daewon, Samsung Medical Center Kolon Life Science secures additional Asia patents for TG-C mixed-cell gene therapy Kolon Life Science said Thursday that patents covering the “mixed-cell gene therapy” approach used in TG-C, an osteoarthritis gene therapy being developed by affiliate Kolon TissueGene, have recently been approved for registration in several Asian markets. The patents cover a technique that combines cells engineered to produce growth factors (TGF-β or BMP) with cells designed to respond to those signals to deliver therapeutic effects. TG-C is administered by mixing two components — a cartilage-cell solution and a genetically modified cell solution — and the company said the approvals provide legal protection for that mixed-administration method. Kolon Life Science said it has been expanding the patent’s scope in Asia. It previously secured the patent in Indonesia in February, followed by registration decisions in the Philippines and Malaysia last month. TG-C is in the final stage of a Phase 3 U.S. clinical trial for knee osteoarthritis. Kolon TissueGene, which is running the U.S. study, aims to release topline results in July 2026 after completing two years of follow-up and analyzing the data. Based on those results, it plans to submit a biologics license application to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in the first quarter of 2027. Daewoong says osteoporosis drug Stoboclo tops 11.8 billion won in first-year sales Daewoong Pharmaceutical said Thursday that Stoboclo, an osteoporosis treatment it co-markets with Celltrion Pharm, posted cumulative first-year sales of 11.8 billion won. Stoboclo is South Korea’s first biosimilar to Prolia, a global blockbuster osteoporosis drug, and was launched in March last year. According to market research firm IQVIA, Stoboclo reached about 11.8 billion won in cumulative sales through the fourth quarter, moving into the domestic “blockbuster” category of more than 10 billion won in annual sales. South Korea’s osteoporosis drug market is estimated at about 3.6 trillion won as of last year. Within that, the denosumab segment totals about 1.6 trillion won, or 45% of the overall market. Daewoong said Stoboclo’s share of the denosumab market grew to about 14% in the fourth quarter, and stood at about 7% on a full-year cumulative basis. Daewoong said it plans to expand prescribing across major general and university hospitals, with the goal of building Stoboclo into a “mega blockbuster” with annual sales exceeding 100 billion won. Celltrion says post-hoc Phase 3 analysis of Zymfentra published in IBD journal Celltrion said Thursday that a paper reporting post-hoc results from a global Phase 3 trial of Zymfentra — the only subcutaneous formulation of infliximab — was published in the latest issue of the international journal Inflammatory Bowel Diseases. Zymfentra is the U.S. brand name for Remsima SC. The journal is the official publication of the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation, a large U.S. nonprofit supporting patients and research, Celltrion said, adding that the journal ranks in the top 20% of its field by impact factor. The analysis covered 102 weeks of data from the Phase 3 program and evaluated patients with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis who lost response while on maintenance therapy of Zymfentra 120 mg every two weeks. Researchers assessed clinical effectiveness after increasing the dose to 240 mg. Celltrion said more than 80% of patients with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis regained response after the dose increase. Most showed recovery within eight weeks, and early responders also posted favorable results across several measures used to assess long-term effectiveness. Daewon Pharmaceutical to hold Naver launch event for Chondroitin King 1200 Daewon Pharmaceutical’s health supplement brand Daewon Health said Thursday it will hold a “Chondroitin King 1200 Launch Festa” to mark the release of its new product, Chondroitin King 1200. The online event will be held exclusively on Naver and is designed as the product’s first consumer showcase. The supplement’s main ingredient is chondroitin sulfate, which the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety has recognized as able to help support joint and cartilage health, the company said. Daewon said the ingredient is an individually approved material whose functionality and safety were verified through a separate review, and that it is the first and only chondroitin health supplement from a domestic pharmaceutical company to use such an individually approved ingredient. Daewon said it used carefully selected material with more than 90% purity and the same structure as chondroitin found in human cartilage. It said the product is designed for once-daily use, with two tablets providing 1,200 mg of the main ingredient. Samsung Medical Center opens senior lounge service desk for patients 65 and older Samsung Medical Center said Thursday it began operating an “SMC Senior Lounge” starting April 1. The hospital said it has set up a dedicated service counter on the first floor of its main building for customers ages 65 and older, providing assistance with services needed to use the hospital. The hospital said the lounge is expected to reflect seniors’ needs and help drive broader changes across the hospital. When necessary, staff will call caregivers, such as adult children, to confirm that senior customers are not experiencing difficulties during visits. To address common challenges seniors face using digital services such as the hospital app, the hospital said it has assigned staff to help and will also provide guidance on booking transportation and checking insurance-claim documents. It said it is also reviewing the introduction of an autonomous electric wheelchair service using “Age Tech” for customers with limited mobility.* This article has been translated by AI. 2026-04-02 17:46:40
  • Hanmi Pharmaceutical CEO Hwang Sang-yeon makes first official visits to plants, R&D center
    Hanmi Pharmaceutical CEO Hwang Sang-yeon makes first official visits to plants, R&D center Hanmi Pharmaceutical said Thursday that its new CEO, Hwang Sang-yeon, carried out his first official schedule by visiting the company’s production plants in Paltan and Pyeongtaek, Gyeonggi Province, and its research and development center in Dongtan. Hwang on Tuesday visited the Paltan Smart Plant, the Pyeongtaek Bio Plant and the Dongtan R&D Center in sequence, inspecting production lines and listening to employees at research sites. He arrived at the Paltan site at about 7:30 a.m., greeting employees as they came to work. He then checked the information and communications technology-based drug manufacturing process and the radio-frequency identification logistics and delivery system. At the Pyeongtaek Bio Plant, he toured manufacturing facilities with capacity of up to 12,500 liters and a production line that makes more than 24 million prefilled syringes a year. At the Dongtan R&D Center, he held a meeting with researchers. Hanmi said Hwang also attended an event on the evening of March 31, his first day in office, for outstanding employees from Beijing Hanmi Pharmaceutical. After completing his first official schedule, Hwang emphasized to employees his commitment to continuing R&D and quality management based on the late founder and former chairman Lim Seong-gi’s management principles of “respect for humanity” and “value creation.” “As CEO of Hanmi Pharmaceutical, I will focus on management grounded in law and common sense, and I will do my utmost to ensure we can establish our standing as a global Hanmi,” Hwang said. He pledged “open management centered on the workplace and employees,” and “organic, active discussions among the group’s holding company and affiliates” to pursue advanced management practices.* This article has been translated by AI. 2026-04-02 15:52:09
  • Korean Pharma and Biotech Briefs: Dongkook, Dong-A, HK inno.N, Daewoong, Huons
    Korean Pharma and Biotech Briefs: Dongkook, Dong-A, HK inno.N, Daewoong, Huons Dongkook Pharmaceutical marks 10th year of ‘Love Scaling’ volunteer dental program Dongkook Pharmaceutical said Wednesday it held a “Love Scaling” volunteer event with the Korean Academy of Periodontology on March 27 at Hanyang Women’s University. The program is a joint talent-donation initiative by the academy, the university and Dongkook Pharmaceutical. It provides oral checkups, scaling and other dental services to people who have difficulty visiting a dentist. A separate ceremony was held to mark the program’s 10th event. Rep. Jeon Hyeon-hui of the Democratic Party, whose constituency includes the area where the university is located, was appointed this year’s “Love Scaling” ambassador. At the ceremony, the Korean Academy of Periodontology presented recent research on periodontal disease at Seongbundo Welfare Center and proposed institutional adoption of panoramic imaging during health screenings for people with disabilities so all teeth can be checked at once. Dongkook Pharmaceutical presented on the ESG value of the volunteer program. Dong-A Pharmaceutical’s Fation launches after-sun gel lotion Dong-A Pharmaceutical said Wednesday its derma-cosmetics brand Fation has launched an “After Sun Gel Lotion” designed to care for sunburned skin after UV exposure. The product is intended to soothe irritated skin and provide moisture while addressing five sunburn-related symptoms: heat, irritation, dryness, flaking and hyperpigmentation, the company said. Combining features of gel and lotion, it can be used on the face and body in settings such as outdoor sports, camping and travel, it said. Dong-A said human application testing confirmed it helps lower skin temperature and calm the skin, and may help improve UV-related moisture loss, flaking and hyperpigmentation. The product contains 58% of the company’s proprietary ingredient, Azulene Repair™. Fation said it plans to expand into after-sun care, beyond a market centered on sunscreen products. HK inno.N holds 42nd anniversary ceremony and Compliance Day event HK inno.N said Wednesday it held a ceremony for its 42nd anniversary and an event marking “Compliance Day” on March 31 at HK inno.N Square. The event, attended by CEO Kwak Dal-won, executives and employees, reviewed the company’s 42-year history and aimed to strengthen communication. It was held both in person and online, the company said. Participants watched a commemorative video in which long-serving employees and new hires exchanged questions to promote intergenerational understanding. The company also presented long-service awards to five employee representatives, it said. After the ceremony, HK inno.N held its 11th Compliance Day event. Kwak and Executive Director Kim Ki-ho, who serve as co-compliance officers, joined employees in signing an anti-corruption and compliance pledge, the company said. Daewoong Pharmaceutical to launch low-dose combination drug for dyslipidemia Daewoong Pharmaceutical said it will launch Baroejet tablets (pitavastatin 1 mg and ezetimibe 10 mg) on April 1 as a treatment for dyslipidemia. The new low-dose combination is indicated for primary hypercholesterolemia, the company said. The company said statins are known to show diminishing gains in efficacy at higher doses, while concerns about side effects such as muscle pain increase. It said that when a statin dose is doubled, LDL cholesterol reduction increases by about 6%, while adding ezetimibe can be expected to provide an additional reduction of at least about 18%. Daewoong said demand for low-dose statin combination therapies is rising as treatment strategies change. It cited domestic prescription growth last year of 37% for low-dose combinations based on rosuvastatin and 157% for those based on atorvastatin. Baroejet was developed to address unmet needs, the company said, adding it offers a new 1/10 mg low-dose option among pitavastatin-based combinations and expands treatment choices. Daewoong said the product may also be useful for patients taking multiple medications because pitavastatin has low dependence on CYP enzymes, which could reduce the burden of drug interactions. Huons Group donates 100 million won to Choi Jae-hyung memorial foundation Huons Group said Wednesday it delivered a total of 100 million won in donations on March 31 to the Choi Jae-hyung Memorial Foundation, a nonprofit honoring the independence activist. The company said the funds will be used to highlight Choi’s achievements, expand education and commemorative projects, and support Koryo-saram and younger generations of ethnic Koreans. Choi, described as an entrepreneur and educator, led the Korean community in Russia’s Primorsky Krai. The company said he devoted himself to Korea’s independence by raising funds for the independence movement and supporting Ahn Jung-geun’s actions, and that he died after being arrested by Japanese forces in 1920. The foundation continues fundraising at home and abroad for historical recognition efforts and support programs for Koreans, it said. Huons Group Chairman Yoon Sung-tae attended the foundation’s supporters’ association launch ceremony on March 26 as a leading business figure and expressed support for fundraising and sponsorship, the company said. It said the association is co-chaired by Park Jong-beom, chairman of the World-OKTA, and Jung Seok-hyun, chairman of Susan Group, with Kim Hyung-oh, a former National Assembly speaker, serving as an adviser, among others.* This article has been translated by AI. 2026-04-01 19:30:00
  • Lotte Biologics Signs CDMO Deal With U.S. Cancer Biotech for Antibody Drug Substance
    Lotte Biologics Signs CDMO Deal With U.S. Cancer Biotech for Antibody Drug Substance Lotte Biologics said Wednesday it has signed a contract manufacturing and development (CDMO) agreement with a U.S.-based biotech company specializing in cancer to produce antibody drug substance and develop related processes. Under the deal, Lotte Biologics will produce antibody samples needed for global late-stage clinical trials and optimize large-scale processes, supported by its Syracuse Bio Campus in New York. The company said the project is designed with follow-on clinical work and commercialization in mind, beyond producing clinical samples. It plans to support the candidate’s clinical and commercialization readiness using its large-scale facilities and manufacturing capabilities. Lotte Biologics said it is using the Syracuse campus as a base to expand collaboration with customers and will link it with its Songdo Bio Campus, scheduled for completion this year, to strengthen customized CDMO services built on integrated quality operations and to enhance supply chain management capabilities. A Lotte Biologics official said the order “has laid the groundwork for large-scale contracts” with cancer-focused biotech companies and added the company will work to ensure it leads to commercialization and additional orders.* This article has been translated by AI. 2026-04-01 11:42:00
  • Dongkook, Yuhan and Celltrion Post Global Marketing, Donation Updates
    Dongkook, Yuhan and Celltrion Post Global Marketing, Donation Updates Dongkook Pharmaceutical’s Centellian24 joins major global beauty expo Dongkook Pharmaceutical said its dermacosmetic brand Centellian24 participated in Cosmoprof Bologna 2026, billed as the world’s largest beauty trade show, held March 26-29 in Bologna, Italy. Now in its 57th year, the event is a venue for sharing market trends and business opportunities. Organizers drew about 3,100 companies from more than 150 countries and more than 250,000 industry participants, the company said. Centellian24 attended for a second straight year and ran a standalone booth to expand contact with global buyers. The booth featured hands-on demonstrations of key products including Madeca Cream Time Reverse; Expert Madeca Cream Active Renew PDRN; 360 Shot PDRN Active Serum; 360 Shot PDRN Lifting Eye Cream; 360 Shot PDRN Glowing Eye Patch; and the Madeca Prime Max beauty device. Yuhan holds blood drive across sites to support supply and cancer patients Yuhan said it ran a “blood donation campaign to save lives” across its operations, including its Daebang-dong headquarters as well as research facilities and plants, to help ease blood shortages and support cancer patients. The campaign was held over three days — March 16, 17 and 20 — the company said. Yuhan has run the program since 2008 and holds it regularly twice a year, in the first and second halves. A total of 71 employees participated this time, bringing cumulative participation to about 2,500, it said. Employees also donated blood donation certificates, which are to be used through the Korea Childhood Leukemia Foundation to support pediatric cancer patients who need transfusions. Celltrion holds Brazil launch event for autoimmune drug Omliclo Celltrion said it held a launch event in Brazil — the largest pharmaceutical market in Latin America — for Omliclo, an autoimmune disease treatment whose active ingredient is omalizumab. About 80 people attended, including Brazilian specialists in allergy, respiratory medicine and dermatology, as well as representatives from insurers, the company said. Presentations covered Omliclo’s clinical data, global prescribing experience and its value in real-world care settings. Attendees showed strong interest in prescribing experience and expressed expectations for broader use, Celltrion said. Celltrion’s Brazil unit has continued local marketing since launching Omliclo there in November. It recently won a bid from the Santa Catarina state government, securing an early supply channel, the company said. With Omliclo launched as a “first mover” in Brazil, Celltrion said it expects additional bid wins to continue. Jaseng delivers rice donation in Busan and launches local volunteer group Jaseng Medical Foundation said it delivered 480 bags of 10-kilogram white rice to the Busan Community Chest on March 30 to support food needs among vulnerable residents. The Busan city government will assist with administrative support for recipients, while the Busan Community Chest will select households in need, the foundation said. Each selected household will receive 10 kilograms of rice, to be distributed through food banks and food markets across Busan’s 16 districts and counties. A launch ceremony for the Busan Jaseng Volunteer Group was also held after the donation event. The group, formed with 21 members, is a private volunteer organization made up of local residents and aims to build sustained ties with the community, the foundation said. Busan Jaseng Korean Medicine Hospital will support its operations and activities.* This article has been translated by AI. 2026-03-31 17:29:12
  • GC Pharma Earns MSCI ESG Rating Upgrade to AA for Third Straight Year
    GC Pharma Earns MSCI ESG Rating Upgrade to AA for Third Straight Year GC Pharma said Monday it received an "AA" rating in the latest environmental, social and governance assessment released by Morgan Stanley Capital International, or MSCI. MSCI has evaluated key ESG issues for about 8,500 listed companies worldwide each year since 1999, assigning ratings on a seven-step scale from AAA to CCC. In this year’s review, GC Pharma was rated above industry peers in environmental impact management, corporate ethics, and product quality and safety management, lifting its score by one notch from the previous assessment. The company’s rating has risen for three consecutive years, from B in 2023 to A in 2024 and AA this year. The company said the upgrade reflected steps including building an environmental risk management system and cutting air pollutant emissions, strengthening anti-corruption training for employees, establishing a response system to stabilize pharmaceutical supplies, and adopting a responsible marketing policy. Kim Seong-yeol, head of GC Pharma’s management administration office, said the AA rating "shows our ESG capabilities have been recognized externally," adding that the company will "continue building a sustainable management system that meets global standards."* This article has been translated by AI. 2026-03-30 18:24:26
  • Drugmakers Expand Portfolios Through Co-Promotion Deals
    Drugmakers Expand Portfolios Through Co-Promotion Deals Co-promotion deals between multinational drugmakers with branded medicines and South Korean companies with local sales networks are continuing, as partners combine strengths to speed market penetration and lift revenue. Industry officials said March 27 that co-promotion has long been used in South Korea’s pharmaceutical sector. Multinationals gain access to the domestic market, while local firms broaden their presence in specific therapeutic areas by selling established products. Huons said it entered the vaccine business after signing a domestic distribution and co-promotion agreement on March 25 with global drugmaker Sanofi for injectable vaccines. Starting next month, Huons will handle distribution and marketing for five vaccines, including the influenza vaccine Vaxigrip. The company plans to leverage its injectable-drug sales force and cold-chain capabilities, drawing on refrigerated distribution experience built through products such as the vitamin C injection Merit C and the immune-boosting adjunct injection Hudaxin. It recently set up a dedicated Vaccine Business Division to run the effort. Bukwang Pharmaceutical is also expanding, teaming with Servier to strengthen its cardiovascular portfolio. Under a strategic co-sales agreement covering seven products, including treatments for hypertension and angina, Servier will cover general hospitals and other facilities with 300 beds or more. The two companies will jointly cover medical institutions with 100 to 299 beds, while Bukwang will lead sales and marketing for facilities with fewer than 100 beds. Bukwang, which has focused on gastroenterology and endocrinology, has been widening its prescription-drug lineup, including by acquiring Korea Union Pharmaceutical earlier this year for its chronic-disease products. The Servier partnership is seen as part of that push into cardiovascular care. Hanmi Pharmaceutical has sought to deepen share in areas where it already has a strong sales base. Earlier this year, it signed a co-promotion deal with Ferring Pharmaceuticals Korea for the nocturia and enuresis treatments Minirin and Nocdurna. It also agreed with Handok Teva to distribute and sell Ajovy, a preventive migraine treatment, expanding into the neurology field. Co-promotion is valued for enabling faster sales growth and more efficient market access. But if sales fall short or profitability weakens, contract terms may be adjusted, leaving local companies with the task of turning near-term gains into stronger in-house competitiveness. Jung Yoon-taek, head of the Pharmaceutical Industry Strategy Research Institute, said the industry has long relied on collaboration built on specialization and efficiency. “By combining each company’s areas of expertise, co-promotion can raise both sales and profits at the same time,” he said. “That makes its importance likely to grow.”* This article has been translated by AI. 2026-03-27 17:24:00
  • Korea Drug Regulator Eases Biosimilar Phase 3 Rules; Kolon Names New CEO
    Korea Drug Regulator Eases Biosimilar Phase 3 Rules; Kolon Names New CEO MFDS releases guidance to ease biosimilar Phase 3 trial requirements, offers pre-review South Korea’s Ministry of Food and Drug Safety said March 27 that its National Institute of Food and Drug Safety Evaluation has released guidance outlining what to consider when deciding whether a biosimilar needs a Phase 3 comparative efficacy trial. The agency also said it will run a pre-review process to support faster biosimilar development. The guidance covers the theoretical basis for easing Phase 3 requirements, quality and clinical factors to weigh, and the procedures and documents needed to discuss a waiver. The ministry said it also plans to revise approval regulations to apply the eased requirements. It includes criteria under which a Phase 3 trial may not be required when sufficient similarity and safety to an already approved original drug are demonstrated based on quality data and Phase 1 results. The ministry said it will set up a pre-review system so biosimilar developers can consult on whether Phase 3 requirements can be eased for products under development. Kolon Life Science appoints Lee Han-kook as CEO Kolon Life Science said March 27 that it appointed Vice President Lee Han-kook as CEO at a shareholders meeting and board meeting held March 26. Born in 1973, Lee is a pharmaceutical and biotech industry professional with experience across the full process of developing and commercializing new drugs, generics and active pharmaceutical ingredients, from R&D and manufacturing to regulatory approvals and business development at home and abroad. He worked at Daewoong Pharmaceutical on synthetic research, overseas regulatory approvals, overseas business and building overseas research hubs, and later served as an executive in regulatory affairs at a biotech company in San Diego. He then moved to Kunwha Pharmaceutical, where he led the medical and R&D divisions and served as CEO. Lee said, “Based on Kolon Life Science’s strong bio and chemical capabilities, I will build renewed trust in the global biotech market and deliver visible results.” Gachon University Gil Medical Center holds free public lecture for Heart Failure Day Gachon University Gil Medical Center said March 27 that it held a “heart failure public lecture” on March 25 to mark the Korean Society of Heart Failure’s Heart Failure Day. Hosted by the hospital’s Heart Failure and Pulmonary Hypertension Center, the event aimed to explain heart failure, treatment, rehabilitation and overall management in an accessible way. Heart failure is a condition in which the heart’s function declines and it cannot supply enough blood. The hospital said patient numbers have steadily increased with population aging. Because early symptoms can be mistaken for simple fatigue or shortness of breath, early diagnosis and ongoing management are important. The lecture was chaired by cardiology professor Shin Ik-kyun and thoracic and cardiovascular surgery professor Park Cheol-hyeon, with specialists presenting by field. A question-and-answer session followed. Jaseng Medical Foundation donates 30 million won for children’s spine health program The Jaseng Medical Foundation said March 27 that it donated 30 million won on March 26 to the child welfare organization ChildFund Korea to support a children’s spine health initiative. The donation ceremony was held in a meeting room at ChildFund Korea’s office in Seoul’s Jung District, with officials from both organizations attending. The foundation said the funds will be used through September for about 600 children at 25 community child centers in the Seoul metropolitan area, including tailored stretching programs, instructor support, and providing InBody body composition tests and portable height-measuring devices. This year’s program is scheduled to run from July through September for 10 sessions, once a week. The foundation said it has worked with various organizations on the project since 2011. It began with eight institutions but has expanded to 25, more than tripling in scale, to support children’s spine health. In 2017, it received an excellence award for a program at the Seoul Social Contribution Awards.* This article has been translated by AI. 2026-03-27 17:09:00
  • ADC Drug Development Shifts to Platforms as Linker Technology Becomes Key Edge
    ADC Drug Development Shifts to Platforms as Linker Technology Becomes Key Edge Antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) development is increasingly shifting from individual drug candidates to platform-based approaches, as companies seek technologies that can be scaled across multiple programs in cancer drug development, where costs and timelines are heavy. According to global market research firm Grand View Research, the ADC market is projected to grow from about $12 billion in 2024 to about $32 billion in 2033. As the market expands, companies that control core technology platforms are gaining value. With tumor-killing efficacy reaching a certain level, precise design to reduce toxicity and improve stability in the body has emerged as a key differentiator. Pfizer moved to secure an ADC platform by acquiring Seagen, an ADC leader, for about $43 billion in 2023. The goal was to obtain an integrated technology system that includes linkers, payloads and manufacturing know-how, rather than a single candidate. Pfizer expects more than $10 billion in revenue from the business by 2030. A platform strategy can also reduce development risk. An industry official said that even if clinical results for a specific candidate fall short, a platform makes it possible to switch to other targets, creating a structural advantage. South Korean drugmakers are also pursuing platform access. Chong Kun Dang Pharmaceutical followed joint ADC discovery research with Netherlands-based Synaffix by securing nonexclusive rights to related platform technology in 2023 for about $132 million. While other companies can also use the platform under a nonexclusive deal, the move is seen as a way to speed development by adopting a validated technology. Synaffix is known for linker technology that precisely attaches payloads at specific sites, and it has signed multiple technology-transfer agreements with global drugmakers including Janssen and Amgen. Chong Kun Dang's candidate CKD-703 targets the hepatocyte growth factor receptor (c-Met) and has received U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval to begin a Phase 1 clinical trial. Dong-A ST acquired ADC specialist Aptis to secure its third-generation linker platform, AbClick. The company aims to accelerate ADC development by combining its antibody research capabilities with Aptis' linker technology. Previously, attaching drugs effectively often required genetically modifying antibodies. AbClick is designed to selectively connect drugs at specific sites without antibody modification. DA-3501, an ADC candidate targeting gastric and pancreatic cancers that applies the platform, is scheduled to enter Phase 1 trials in the first half of this year. Samjin Pharm has also built in-house platforms for ADC development, including OncoStab and OncoFlame, and plans to improve research efficiency through open innovation with Novelty Nobility and APT Bio, companies specializing in antibody drug development. Its gastric and breast cancer treatment candidate SJA21 and immuno-oncology ADC candidate SJA71 are in preclinical stages. As technology advances, competition is also shifting. Han Yong-hee, a researcher at Growth Research, wrote in an ADC industry report that biotech companies with platforms can secure stable cash flow through technology transfers and royalties, while global drugmakers can speed development and diversify portfolios by licensing platforms. He said the ADC market is evolving from competition over new drugs to competition over platforms.* This article has been translated by AI. 2026-03-27 09:57:03
  • Dongkook Pharm Moves to Develop Generic of Chong Kun Dang Diabetes Drug Duvie
    Dongkook Pharm Moves to Develop Generic of Chong Kun Dang Diabetes Drug Duvie Dongkook Pharmaceutical has begun developing a generic version of Chong Kun Dang Pharmaceutical’s diabetes drug Duvie (lobeglitazone). According to the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety on the 27th, Dongkook Pharmaceutical on March 13 received approval to conduct a bioequivalence study for “DKF-457.” Duvie, developed by Chong Kun Dang, is described as South Korea’s first thiazolidinedione (TZD) class diabetes treatment, with annual prescriptions totaling about 20 billion won. TZD drugs once led the diabetes market in the 2000s, but their use declined after cardiovascular side-effect concerns emerged over GlaxoSmithKline’s Avandia (rosiglitazone). Dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitors later took the lead, and the market is now dominated by DPP-4 inhibitors and sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT-2) inhibitors. While TZDs represent a smaller segment today, they continue to be prescribed for certain patients, including those with high insulin resistance or fatty liver disease. Interest has recently returned to combining TZDs with SGLT-2 inhibitors, and the move into TZD generics is being viewed as part of a strategy to broaden options for combination prescribing. Dongkook Pharmaceutical has been seeking to expand its share of the diabetes market in prescription drugs since 2023. It said it has 15 diabetes-related products, including Tenelican, Daplejin, Sitakan and the insulin injection Glazia, along with treatments for chronic conditions that often accompany diabetes, such as hypertension and high cholesterol. A company official said, “At the research stage, the flagship pipeline is DKF-447, a diabetes treatment that has completed product approval, and we plan to continue expanding the diabetes pipeline.” Competition in the Duvie generic market has already begun. Shin Poong Pharmaceutical started development first last year, setting up a race for generics. The substance patent is set to expire March 21 next year. A pharmaceutical industry official said competition is already overheated in markets centered on blockbuster products, adding that companies are expected to keep focusing strategies on areas where they can secure clear market share.* This article has been translated by AI. 2026-03-27 09:45:21