
Keylika develops first Buccal Patch for Iron Deficiency Anemia (IDA)
You probably know at least one person suffering from iron deficiency – however, it still remains one of the top undermined health problems today. Despite affecting over 10 million Americans and a staggering 1.3 billion people worldwide, treatment options remain stuck in the past – until now. Specific to the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, the high tea consumption laden with phytates and tannins inhibits dietary iron absorption, contributing to higher rates of iron deficiency here.
'Most people have no idea how debilitating iron deficiency anemia can be. As a critical micronutrient, iron has a foundational role to play in multiple biological processes in the body down to the cellular level, its uncorrected deficiency has far-reaching consequences,' says Buddha Chaudhuri, Ph.D., CEO of biotech company, Keylika. After years working on drug delivery and medical devices, Keylika's team has pioneered what could be a breakthrough solution: the world's first buccal patch for treating iron deficiency.
Bringing scientific expertise to the challenge
With a Ph.D. in drug delivery systems from KU Leuven and Imec in Belgium, Buddha brings extensive expertise to combat iron deficiency treatment. His career spans postdoctoral research at UCSF and UC Berkeley, along with leadership roles directing microsystems technology at Biolinq, where he developed wearable continuous glucose monitoring devices.
'My background in microfabrication, materials science and drug delivery systems gave me unique insights into how we might solve this widespread problem,' Buddha explains. This specialised knowledge led him to establish Keylika, a Y Combinator-backed Biotech startup now developing a first-of-its-kind solution for iron deficiency.
Symptoms and challenges in diagnosis of IDA
Iron is a core component of haemoglobin, the oxygen-transporting protein in the body. Without it, oxygen carrying is impacted and virtually every organ system of the body can suffer damage. Sustained iron deficiency can cause persistent fatigue, weakness, shortness of breath, heart palpitations, compromised immunity, musculoskeletal problems, skin and hair issues and even neurocognitive impairment. These symptoms are often debilitating and mask the underlying condition, which is why many doctors dismiss them as stress, anxiety, or depression, particularly in women. This leads to underdiagnosis and undertreatment, perpetuating the cycle of suffering.
Overcoming the limitations of existing treatments
Anyone who has taken iron pills knows the unpleasant side effects. Stomach pain, nausea, constipation, diarrhoea – it's no wonder compliance rates are so poor. Dr. Christy Evans, a board-certified Obstetrician and Gynecologist and functional women's health practitioner at Almond ObGyn in Los Angeles, sees the problem firsthand. 'Iron deficiency impacts roughly 40 per cent of adolescent women and up to 35 per cent of adult women of reproductive age,' she explains. 'Standard oral supplements have low bioavailability and poor gastrointestinal tolerance, which become especially more pronounced in pregnancy.'
Several factors increase risk for iron deficiency anemia, especially in women, including:
Monthly menstrual blood loss, particularly for women with heavy periods
Pregnancy and post-partum, when iron demands often exceed dietary intake
Underlying conditions that result in iron malabsorption, e.g. inflammatory bowel disease, chronic kidney disease, post-bariatric surgery, cancer, etc.
Vegetarian or vegan diets, as plant sources provide less bioavailable iron, and polyphenols inhibit iron absorption
Intense physical activity, which places a higher burden on oxygen transport, thereby consuming more iron, leading to faster iron depletion
Despite affecting 1 in 4 women globally, iron deficiency often gets misdiagnosed as anxiety, depression, or simply being 'tired.' This dismissal leads to misdiagnosis and prolonged suffering for millions.
The alternative isn't much better. Intravenous (IV) iron infusions work well but require clinical settings, carry risks, and cost a small fortune. According to another physician, Dr. Rondeep Brar, Clinical Professor of Medicine-Haematology at Stanford School of Medicine: 'Such infusions are safe and effective, though require clinical supervision in an infusion center, are not readily accessible to many patients, and carry significant cost.'
Introducing the Buccal Patch: A world first for iron delivery
Keylika's innovative approach centers on a proprietary non-heme iron complex delivered through a dissolvable buccal patch technology called KEYPaxtek™. The patch adheres to the inner oral cheek for less than 30 minutes, allowing iron to absorb directly into the bloodstream, bypassing the gastrointestinal tract and the first pass metabolism. 'We've developed a new small-molecule drug that permeates the buccal mucosa and eliminates the GI side effects associated with oral supplements,' Buddha notes. 'Our preclinical studies have demonstrated both safety and efficacy in the buccal delivery of iron into systemic circulation.'
The idea has caught the attention of specialists like Dr. Rondeep Brar, at Stanford. 'A novel transbuccal solution could be a valuable addition to available options if a therapeutically relevant dose can be delivered without significant side effects,' notes Dr. Brar. Early tests look promising. In experiments with iron-deficient hamsters, the patch successfully delivered iron directly into the bloodstream without toxic effects. Keylika is exploring potential partnership opportunities with pharma companies to develop the technology further. Dr Evans, who sees many female patients with iron deficiency, can imagine its impact on her patient population, 'Keylika's unique approach of delivering a more absorbable form of iron with a buccal patch can be a game-changer as it has the potential to achieve significantly higher efficacy minus the typical GI side effects of orals.'
Vision for a platform technology
Buddha isn't working alone. His co-founder and CTO, Frederik Ceyssens, Ph.D., brings complementary medical expertise with over 150 published research articles. Together with advisors from major medical institutions, they are tackling challenges like ensuring the patch is shelf-stable and tastes acceptable while scaling up manufacturing. 'While iron deficiency constitutes a huge unmet medical need, and is our first go-to clinical indication, this is not our only asset,' says Buddha.
Frederik Ceyssens explains, 'Our buccal patch has been demonstrated as a platform drug delivery technology, one that can be used to deliver a wide range of molecules less than 10 kDa molecular size that suffer from poor oral bioavailability, directly into blood circulation without the need for injections.' In that, Keylika's buccal technology represents a step-change in oral drug delivery norms, with the overarching goal of administering hard-to-deliver drugs systemically bridging molecular size and dosage constraints.
The company's next strategic asset class is peptides and hormones, with the KEYPaxtek™ delivery tech exhibiting the potential to deliver these molecules. Keylika was recently accepted into Bakar Labs at UC Berkeley, giving them access to additional resources and expertise. The next major milestone will be more preclinical tests culminating in first-in-human studies, followed by FDA submissions. 'Our goal has always been to find solutions that actually work for patients,' Buddha says. 'When you're iron deficient, you just want to feel better without trading in one problem for another.' If Keylika succeeds, millions of people might finally have an option that doesn't force them to choose between adverse oral side effects or hasslesome injections.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Gulf Today
a day ago
- Gulf Today
MAHA report's errors are just start of its problems
Lisa Jarvis and Michael Hiltzik, Tribune News Service Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s new Make America Healthy Again report offers a road to wellness for the nation's children paved not with the gold-standard science he promised, but with pyrite. The report, created by a MAHA commission that includes all of President Donald Trump's cabinet members, mixes nuggets of truth — like the idea that it's important to focus on kids' health — with gross misrepresentations of scientific research. Some of the studies are even made up. The nonprofit news organisation Notus first reported that some of the commission's findings relied on research that doesn't exist. The document, released last week, includes seven fabricated studies related to kids' mental health and the overprescribing of medications for ADHD, depression and asthma. The New York Times later identified several other fake citations. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt attributed the inclusion of phony publications to 'formatting issues' that would be corrected. An updated report that omits those studies and cleans up bizarre errors in several others has since been uploaded to the White House website. That version contained fresh errors, Notus reported. Many suspect that the fake citations are the product of AI. That alone should be disqualifying. Rather than the thoughtful, evidence-based assessment our kids deserve, the first major report on Kennedy's cornerstone initiative was a slapped-together treatise. But there's a bigger problem. If the MAHA team did rely on AI to generate supporting data — and it seems likely it did — it wasn't just cutting corners. It confirms this project was never a good faith effort to begin with. The team was assembling evidence to reinforce conclusions that supported Kennedy's well-known narrative. That pattern is bolstered by the report's interpretation of the real studies it cites. Data is conveniently twisted to fit Kennedy's personal beliefs. A recurring tendency is to exaggerate the size of the current problem by minimising the significance of those in the past. For example, the report points to a fivefold rise in the rates of celiac disease since the 1980s but fails to acknowledge a dramatic increase in diagnosis and awareness of the autoimmune disorder. The same is true for the report's discussions of inflammatory bowel disease, childhood cancer and autism. None of this should be surprising. In nearly every interview he gives, Kennedy repeats the same inflated statistics to drive home the terrible state of our kids' health. His goal seems to be to scare the public into acquiescence. If the problem is this bad, if our kids are this sick, if health agencies have failed them this profoundly, why not blindly follow his ideas for fixing it? Something more insidious is at play with all of the half-baked or made-up statistics. He is using them to undermine the real experts, making it increasingly hard for Americans to understand whose advice to trust. And ultimately, his willfully misleading analysis provides cover while he dismantles longstanding norms for scientific research and health policy. In just a few short months, the secretary has wielded his authority in unprecedented and dangerous ways. For example, amid the largest measles outbreak in 30 years, instead of emphasising vaccines — which can prevent the disease — he asked the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to develop guidelines for treatments. There are no proven treatments for measles. At least three people have died, and nearly 1,100 cases of the disease have been reported. In another disturbing move, Kennedy said he would unilaterally change the CDC's COVID vaccine guidelines to preclude pregnant women and children from receiving shots. That upended the longstanding process that relies on outside experts' careful analysis and open debate before making such decisions. Days later, the CDC amended its regulations to incorporate some, but not all of Kennedy's proposed changes, leaving many confused not only about the actual policy but who sets it. We should worry that his approach to measles and COVID is a preview of how he will treat the value of other routine shots. One of the most alarming sections of the report questions the evidence behind and safety of the childhood vaccine schedule and — without evidence — suggests it could be linked to chronic disease. Kennedy has also used his platform to push policy changes on the use of fluoride in drinking water, which he has repeatedly linked to lower IQs (a tenuous claim that experts say is based on fluoride levels not used in the US). Fluoridation is regulated by state and local municipalities, but Kennedy said he would direct the CDC to stop recommending the practice and the Food and Drug Administration — also under his purview — later banned fluoride supplements based on unsubstantiated claims that they harm gut health. His rhetoric on the topic appears to have emboldened the first two state bans on fluoride in public water. The MAHA report's agenda suggests more changes are to come. Meanwhile, new research in JAMA found that removing fluoride from drinking water would result in 25 million more cavities in children at a cost of $9.8 billion to the US healthcare system over five years. Kennedy's next move appears to be wresting control of health and science research altogether. 'We're probably going to stop publishing in the Lancet, New England Journal of Medicine, JAMA and those other journals because they're all corrupt,' he said on a recent podcast with wellness influencer Gary Brecka. Unless those top-tier journals 'change dramatically,' health agencies will 'create our own journals in-house,' he added. In other words, he'll have a ready-made platform to showcase data that justifies whatever policy he wants to roll out next. In another troubling sign of how data could be warped to fit a political agenda, President Donald Trump signed an executive order after the report was released directing a restoration of 'gold standard science.' The goal sounds reasonable enough: to ensure research is reproducible and reverse a decline in public trust in science and health agencies. But the language of the directive is concerning. It not only challenges the credibility of several agencies — including the CDC — but suggests someone like Kennedy could exploit the language of research integrity to crack down on findings that don't fit his personal agenda. Kennedy has called the MAHA report 'the diagnosis' and says he will 'deliver the prescription' in the next 60 days. Given what we've seen over the last few months, we should worry what form that takes — and the far reaching consequences it could have on both American kids and the health infrastructure designed to protect them. Earlier, serious followers of healthcare policy in the US didn't expect much good to emerge from its takeover by President Donald Trump and his secretary of Health and Human Services, the anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. But the agency and its leadership managed to live down to the worst expectations May 27, when HHS released a 73-page 'assessment' of the health of America's children titled 'The MAHA Report' (for 'Make America Healthy Again'). A sloppier, more disingenuous government report would be hard to imagine. Whatever credibility the report might have had as a product of a federal agency was shattered by its obvious errors, misrepresentations and outright fabrications of source materials, some of it plainly the product of the authors' reliance on AI bots. At least seven sources cited in the report do not exist, as Emily Kennard and Margaret Manto of the journalism organisation NOTUS uncovered. HHS hastily reissued the report with some of those citations removed, but without disclosing the changes — an extremely unkosher action in the research community.


Sharjah 24
a day ago
- Sharjah 24
SpaceX set for next Starship launch after fiery failure
A launch window opens at 6:30 pm (2330 GMT) from the company's Starbase facility near a southern Texas village that recently voted to become a city, also called Starbase. Standing 403 feet (123 meters) tall, Starship is the largest and most powerful launch vehicle ever built, and it carries Musk's hopes of making humanity a multi-planetary species. NASA is also counting on a variant of Starship to serve as the crew lander for Artemis 3, the mission to return Americans to the Moon. But the last two tests ended with the upper stages erupting into fiery cascades that sent debris raining down over Caribbean islands and disrupting flights -- piling more pressure onto SpaceX to get it right this time. The company is betting that its aggressive testing approach, which helped it become the dominant force in commercial spaceflight, will once again pay off. Still, it acknowledged in a statement that progress "won't always come in leaps." According to the Wall Street Journal, SpaceX is shifting personnel and resources to the Starship program in a push to have the vehicle ready for a Mars mission as soon as next year.


Gulf Today
2 days ago
- Gulf Today
97 more Palestinians killed over last 24 hours in Gaza
Over the last 24 hours alone, 97 Palestinian bodies, including two recently recovered, were brought to hospitals, alongside 440 wounded individuals. Medical sources in Gaza reported on Wednesday that the death toll from Israel's ongoing military offensive has reached 54,607, the vast majority of whom are women and children, since the start of the war on October 7, 2023. Since March 18, 2025, health authorities report 4,335 deaths and more than 13,300 injuries-figures that continue to climb daily. UN says 'deliberate' choices 'systematically' depriving Gazans The UN aid chief said on Wednesday that recent "horrifying scenes" of Gazans being killed while seeking food aid were the result of "deliberate choices that have systematically deprived" them of essentials to survive. A US and Israeli-backed group operating aid sites in the Gaza Strip announced the temporary closure of its facilities on Wednesday, with the Israeli army warning that roads leading to distribution centres were "considered combat zones." The announcement by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation follows a string of deadly incidents near the distribution sites it operates. On Tuesday, 27 people were killed in southern Gaza when Israeli troops opened fire near a GHF aid site, with the military saying the incident was under investigation. "The world is watching, day after day, horrifying scenes of Palestinians being shot, wounded or killed in Gaza while simply trying to eat," UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher said in a statement. "Emergency medical teams have confirmed treating hundreds of trauma cases. Yesterday alone, dozens were declared dead at hospitals after Israeli forces said they had opened fire. "This is the outcome of a series of deliberate choices that have systematically deprived two million people of the essentials they need to survive." He echoed the call by UN chief Antonio Guterres for immediate independent investigations, saying they were not isolated incidents, and the perpetrators must be held accountable. "No-one should have to risk their life to feed their children," said Fletcher. Agencies