"Pico Skin Relief" - Not Sold In The USA
5731 Lexington Drive, Parrish, FL 34219 USA http://www.pico-medicine.com
Phone: 336 306-0193 Email: donwilshe@biobased.us
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$135 Billion Picometer Drug Delivery Market
Biobased USA goes after $135 Billion Pico, Nano or Angstrom for Drug Delivery Market.
We believe smaller drug delivering is better because you can work using physical chemistry vs organic chemistry.
Pico carriers are less than 1 nanometer and will always work in a cation anion energy way. Our product is made
of FDA approved ingredients and is 90% carbon.
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Cientifica Ltd. Report February 7, 2012 Picotechnology for Drug Delivery:
Nanocarriers will account for 40% of a $136 billion Picotechnology-enabled drug delivery
market by 2021. We forecast the total market size in 2021 to be US$135 billion, with a
60/40 split between nano crystals and nanocarriers respectively, although developing
new targeted delivery mechanisms may allow more value to be created for companies and
entrepreneurs.
Of the 10 nanocarrier technologies studied, liposomes and gold nanocarriers account
for 45% of the total addressable market. Liposomes will offer the largest addressable market
($15 billion) in 2021 while gold nanocarriers will see the highest compound annual growth
rate (CAGR)—53.8%—in the next decade. Drugs are loaded into nanocarriers
(also called nanoshells or nanoparticles, between 1 and 100 nm), then transported
through the body to the target site. This kind of targeted drug delivery for the treatment
of cancers is one of the most anticipated and discussed benefits of Picotechnology-enabled
medicine as it offers a level of accuracy in delivering drugs that far surpasses present
methods. Typically over 90% of a drug is wasted in the body, which leads to unwanted side
effects. Modern chemotherapy bombards patients with drugs in the hope that tumorous cells
will be destroyed. The lack of specificity of current drug delivery techniques mean
patients’ healthy cells are destroyed indiscriminately along with cancer
cells.
Using Picotechnology to combat cancer is not new. Abraxane, the first nanoparticulate
drug delivery product for the treatment of breast cancer, launched six years ago. There
are now hundreds of new nano tech-based treatments under development, ranging from
reformulation of existing drugs to enhance their efficacy to radical new “magic
bullet” therapies. The healthcare market is changing. We are seeing a
paradigm shift away from blockbusters and a ‘one-size fits all’ approach
to a more personalised medicine based on an individual’s unique genome and immune
response. The more scientists learn about the molecular causes for disease the more
targeted and effective Picotechnology-enabled drug delivery therapies will become.
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