Probiotic encapsulation patent opens formulation potential

By Shane Starling

- Last updated on GMT

Probiotic encapsulation patent opens formulation potential
Belgian probiotics player Vésale Pharma has applied to the European Patent Office (EPO) for a probiotic microencapsulation technology patent that can deliver probiotics into new blends such as high-dose vitamin C supplements.

International manager Johan Quintens said the alginate-based technology, called IntelCaps, completely “closed the strains from the outside world” ​so that they became resistant to the effects of heat, oxygen and water.

The process was developed in conjunction with a German lab, BRACE, that possessed the microencapsulation technology which the two firms modified over a year’s working together with the lactobacillus rhamnosis​ strain.

The result, said Quintens, is a technology and platform that can be applied to any probiotic strain, be they Vésale Pharma’s or those of other probiotic suppliers. For its own strains, per kilo costs would be lie somewhere in the vicinity of €800-€1200/kg compared to €500/kg as a ballpark figure for its classic strains.

“So there is a premium but when you consider that some strains can sell at up to €3000/kg then the cost is reasonable given the platform potential,” ​he said.

The company has organised presentation days for the technology in European and US destinations in the coming months and has attracted the interest of Danisco-Dupont, Christian Hansen, Fine Foods and Enestia. It said it hoped to capture a two per cent share of the non-food probiotic market by 2016, equivalent to €68m.

“We think this technology opens a new world to formulators,” ​Quintens said. “Take vitamin C. It is basically poisonous to probiotics at higher concentrations but this technology makes it possible to achieve such blends.”

Smallsphere

The secret to the technology, he said is the “smallsphere” ​micro technology that employs molecules of between 0.6 and 1 micro metres, dimensions approaching nano levels.

“The probiotics are in the beadlets so that offers production savings as well as they are easier to handle,” ​Quintens said.

Traditionally probiotics have existed in lyophilised probiotics in powder form which are not suitable for tablets, chewable tablets that may come in the form of vitamin and mineral blends.

The company has global ambitions for the product, and is especially keen to work with private label manufacturers, Quintens said, noting non-dairy and cereal probiotic products sold €3.4bn globally.

In all categories, the Belgium market alone grew 40 per cent in 2009 and 20 per cent in 2010, despite the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) ruling against probiotic health claim submissions to date.

Of the process the company said: “The microcapsules also resist low pH levels, making it possible for them to pass through the stomach without opening and deliver the viable probiotics directly to the intestine, which is the target organ.”

Related news

Show more

Related products

show more

Whitepaper: Discover a new era in postbiotics

Whitepaper: Discover a new era in postbiotics

Content provided by DSM Nutritional Products | 28-Nov-2023 | White Paper

Postbiotic ingredients are set to open up a world of opportunities across the human health and nutrition industry, fueled by developing science demonstrating...

Taking Immune Support to a New Level

Taking Immune Support to a New Level

Content provided by AB Biotek Human Nutrition & Health | 30-Oct-2023 | White Paper

Patent-pending ABB C1® redefines immune support by addressing innate, acquired, and Trained Immunity. In 'ABB C1®: Training Now for Future Immune...

Related suppliers

Follow us

Products

View more

Webinars