THEME: "Experimental Challenges in Drug Delivery and Nanomedicine"
CEO, Neosinus Health, USA
Title: Emerging Platforms for Targeted and Optimized Drug Delivery
Don Turner has more than 25 years of
experience building world-class companies, with a passion for commercializing
innovations globally. He currently serves as the CEO for Neosinus Health and
Board Member for University of North Carolina’s Center for the Business of
Health. Previously, Don served as the
Global Head of Commercialization for IBM Watson Health, SVP and Global Head of
Commercialization at Merge Healthcare, Managing Director for Millennium
Pharmaceuticals, Committee Chairman at Mass Biotechnology Council, and Advisory
Board Member for Cisco Systems.
He is an industry recognized thought leader and public speaker, with noted expertise in areas such as advanced research and development, precision medicine, innovation commercialization, healthcare transformation, and digital health. Don has served as a keynote and guest speaker on Healthcare Transformation and Precision Medicine at Johns Hopkins University, Emory University, American Diabetes Association, Southeast Medical Device Association, eHealth Forum, BioIT Conference, Innovators Association, and others.
As
noted by the World Health Organization, neurological and psychiatric disorders
represent the greatest global economic and health burden, where more than 1
billion people are affected, and the number is rapidly growing because of the
global pandemic. Even though this medical demand has been known for decades,
the clinical development pipelines from the pharmaceutical industry are largely
deficient, where the most recent commercialized drug for Depression was
approved by the FDA after three decades of effort by the entire pharmaceutical
industry.
The
lack of clinical advancements is not a strategic failure, but rather a direct
result of well-known physiological impedance to drug delivery such as the
first-pass effect and the blood-brain-barrier, which either produce significant
side effects and/or prevent drugs from reaching the therapeutic target.
Thankfully, researchers have discovered viable therapeutic pathways to bypass
drug delivery barriers, and advancements in nanomedicine will further enable drug
delivery, but the greatest potential resides in emerging non-invasive medical
device innovations that will provide both targeted and fully optimized drug
delivery.
This keynote presentation will provide a view into the evolution of drug delivery, clinical dynamics that are motivating emerging classes of therapeutics, existing barriers that could impede advancements, and the latest developments that represent great potential for global health transformation. Specific examples of current research and development will be given, with a focus on the role of non-invasive medical devices to produce targeted and optimized drug delivery via local, systemic, and nose-to-brain routes. Lastly, the talk will discuss how emerging medical devices can also serve to substantially improve the well-known problem of treatment and medicine adherence, which itself is a $300 billion per year problem, and poor adherence will continue to impede even the greatest of advancements in drug delivery and nanomedicine if the problem is not resolved.