President, PSS Clinical Research
Member of the Healthcare Council
Warren Botnick, MD, FCCP, DABSM, is a Partner at Pulmonary and Sleep Specialists in Decatur, Georgia, since March 2003. He is Director of Critical Care Unit and Chief of Medicine at DeKalb Medical Center, Medical Director of Southern Sleep Technologies, and Co-Director of two sleep disorders centers in the Atlanta area, and was one of the founders of Cogent Healthcare, among the first national hospitalist corporations. Dr. Botnick is a principal investigator in research studies on PAH, pulmonary embolism, deep vein thrombosis, asthma, sepsis, pneumonia, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. He has lectured around the country on topics in pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine, and around the world to GLG clients on the marketplace for products in these fields. Dr. Botnick has consulted for companies such as Pfizer, GlaxoSmithKline, Jazz, and Ortho-McNeil. He also has served as a consultant to a privately-held corporation distributing home respiratory and sleep equipment. (This is me - Update Profile)
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Exciting Prospect for Alternative Treatment of COPD and asthma
September 19, 2007
Newly Discovered Fatty Acids May Lead To Novel Treatments For COPD And Asthma | www.medicalnewstoday.com
Eicosanoids appear promising in the treatment of such airways diseases as COPD and asthma, which affect millions worldwide. Any alternative to current anti-inflammatory therapy, which consists almost entirely of forms of corticosteroids, would almost certainly be welcomed and adopted in widespread fashion.
Ceftobiprole for Community-Acquired Pneumonia is Breakthrough in Therapy
September 19, 2007
Basilea Announces Positive Top-line Data from Phase III Study of Ceftobiprole in Community-acquired Pneumonia Requiring Hospitalization | www.pipelinereview.com
Cephalosporins have been standard therapy for pneumonia for many years, but to date this class of drug has been ineffective against MRSA. Ceftobiprole appears to represent a breakthrough in this regard. I would expect the drug to be well tolerated and, for the most part, to cause few major adverse effects. However, the use of ceftriaxone as a comparator is odd, as this would not be used as monotherapy by most physicians in the USA for patients with CAP who are sick enough to warrant hospital admission.
Worldwide Market for Lunivia (eszopiclone) Uncertain
September 19, 2007
GlaxoSmithKline and Sepracor Inc. announce international alliance for commercilisation of Lunivia | www.pipelinereview.com
Though the potential international market for eszopiclone is large, interest in the product among sleep specialists in the US has leveled off. Its success internationally may well depend more on distancing the product from other agents such as the Ambien "family," a decidedly difficult task, and on continuing to downplay the major side effect of bad taste, and less on the size of the potential patient population. For many prescribers, it has become apparent that Lunesta is new but not necessarily improved.
Emergence of Dabigatran for Prevention and Treatment of Blood Clots
September 17, 2007
Dabigatran Etexilate As Effective As Enoxaparin In Lowering Blood Clot Risk After Hip Replacement | www.medicalnewstoday.com
These data help strengthen the growing perception that oral agents in general, direct thrombin inhibitors in particular, and perhaps specifically dabigatran, represent the future of anticoagulation therapy. Safety data are of paramount importance, given the prior failure of ximelagatran in this respect, and thus far dabigatran indeed has avoided causing similar liver toxicity. Ongoing studies of dabigatran, and of other oral agents such as the factor Xa inhibitors, in treatment of venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism will add critical information in this area.
Anticoagulant TB-402 Data Raise Hopes but Raise Safety Concerns
September 12, 2007
ThromboGenics and BioInvent Announce Successful Completion of Phase I Clinical Trial of the Anticoagulant TB-402 | www.pipelinereview.com
Phase I data are promising for prevention on VTE, a major worldwide health problem. However, inhibition of factor VIII raises grave safey concerns, despite safety profile in this study. Long duration of action and cost also will be important considerations (current drug costs for this indication can be very low).
| Study Group Name | No. Members |
|---|---|
| Experts in the Leisure & Lodging Council | 4887 |
| Marketing or Advertising Experts | 4688 |
| Experts in the Automotive Council | 3422 |
| Pulmonologists (US) | 759 |
| Physicians who Treat Asthma (US) | 610 |
June 14, 2006 | Boston
GLGi: Sleep Disorders: The Global Market for Devices and Pharmacologic TreatmentsJune 14, 2006 | New York
GLGi: Sleep Disorders: The Global Market for Devices and Pharmacologic Treatments