jueves, 30 de diciembre de 2010

Diamond-Like Coating

Diamond-Like Coating
Drug Discovery & Development - December 22, 2010


SGE Analytical Science has been awarded a grant from the Victorian State Government to help develop a new diamond-like coating technology. Diamond-like coating technology, or ‘plasma activated high frequency vacuum deposition’ and was originally developed in the US. The coating has low friction and is extremely durable. The grant will assist SGE become the first Australian company to commercialize this enabling technology.
The low friction, highly durable coating will prolong product life and create improved functionality.  SGE Chairman Peter Dawes says the technology has wide application across a range of new and future products. He estimates the technology will contribute $7.7million to global company sales and will ultimately create up to 50 new jobs at the company’s Ringwood manufacturing facility.
With the announcement of the grant, development of the Diamond-like Coating enabling technology can now move ahead with installation of necessary equipment early next year with product development and testing expected by July 2011.  The technology development is part of SGE’s continued commitment to innovation that that will allow the company to continue to bring new technologies and solutions to the scientific community.
SGE Analytical Science 

AMR-001 Demonstrates Effectiveness in AMI

AMR-001 Demonstrates Effectiveness in AMI
Drug Discovery & Development - December 22, 2010


The American Heart Journal reported results of a clinical trial evaluating Amorcyte, Inc.’s lead product candidate, AMR-001 for the treatment of damaged heart muscle following acute myocardial infarction (AMI).  Data demonstrated a significant relationship between cell dose and biologic effect. This is the first and only study to prospectively define a dose of a purified and potent autologous (self-donating) stem cell therapy that resulted in a significant improvement in perfusion, a trend towards improved cardiac function and the potential to reduce subsequent adverse cardiac events following AMI.
The report was authored by researchers from Emory University, Northwestern University, Texas Heart Institute, The Christ Hospital Heart and Vascular Center in Cincinnati, Ohio, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Amorcyte, Inc. and Progenitor Cell Therapy, LLC.
The 31 patients in the Phase I trial were randomly assigned to an autologous stem cell harvest group (cells were harvested from the patient’s own bone marrow) or control group five days after an ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) characterized by a prolonged period of hypoperfusion (blocked blood supply).  CD34+ cells having CXCR-4+ receptors were then isolated from the bone marrow, and enriched to increase potency using Amorcyte’s patented technology into five, 10 and 15 million cell doses.  The cells were infused into the patient via the infarct-related artery seven to 11 days following the STEMI – the optimal time frame to attempt to prevent adverse ventricular remodeling.  Caused by the progressive decline in heart muscle function following an AMI, ventricular remodeling can lead to permanent heart damage and increase the risk of recurrent heart attack, other adverse cardiac events and death.
The study results demonstrated that patients receiving 10 to 15 million cells (n=9) experienced significant improvement in resting perfusion rates at six months as compared to patients receiving 5 million cells (n=6) and control (n=15), as measured by the SPECT total severity score, (-256 versus +13, p=0.01).  Furthermore, patients receiving 10 or more million cells showed a trend towards improvement in ejection fraction, the percentage of blood pumped out of a ventricle with each heartbeat, (+4% versus +1%); end systolic volume (-5.7mL versus -0.1mL); and infarct size, tissue death due to loss of adequate blood supply, (-10% versus -3%) at six month follow-up.
“AMR-001 showed the potential for a patient’s own stem cells to reduce serious long-term complications from a heart attack,” said Arshed Quyyumi, M.D., FRCP, FACC, Professor of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, at Emory University School of Medicine and the trial’s principal investigator and co-author of the report.  “This novel therapy may help severe heart attack patients, who are at the most risk for further downstream events.  I look forward to further investigation of AMR-001 and its potential benefits in the care of heart attack patients.” 
Of the 1 million heart attacks in the U.S. each year, nearly 20 percent are severe enough to cause ventricular remodeling. Amorcyte’s patented technologies and cGMP (current good manufacturing practices) manufacturing processes address the therapeutic and commercial challenges to post-MI stem cell treatment. Unlike other approaches, Amorcyte’s technology has established stem cell product potency, purity, sterility and dose, along with product shelf-life.
“This publication further demonstrates the potential importance AMR-001 may have on the treatment of heart attack patients,” said Andrew Pecora, M.D., Amorcyte Founder and Chief Science Officer  “AMR-001 is the first stem cell therapy to demonstrate neoangiogenesis (formation of new blood vessels) in a threshold dose, in heart muscle damaged from a severe heart attack.  We look forward to further evaluating AMR-001 in a larger Phase II trial where we look toward duplicating the neoangiogenisis achieved in the Phase I trial and also to achieve a significant reduction in downstream adverse events typically resulting from AMI.”
Date: December 21, 2010
Source: Amorcyte, Inc.

Tekmira Begins Phase 1 Cancer Trial

Tekmira Begins Phase 1 Cancer Trial
Drug Discovery & Development - December 22, 2010


Tekmira Pharmaceuticals Corporation, a leading developer of RNA interference (RNAi) therapeutics, announced it has initiated patient dosing in a Phase 1 human clinical trial for its lead oncology product, TKM-PLK1. TKM-PLK1 targets polo-like kinase 1, or PLK1, a cell cycle protein involved in tumor cell proliferation and a validated oncology target. Inhibition of PLK1 prevents the tumor cell from completing cell division, resulting in cell cycle arrest and cancer cell death.
Dr. Mark J. Murray, Tekmira's President and CEO, said, "We are pleased to have progressed to the point of initiating this Phase 1 human clinical trial for our lead oncology product. TKM-PLK1 has demonstrated anti-tumor efficacy in preclinical models of liver cancer as well as tumors outside the liver, supporting our strong belief that PLK1 represents an excellent target for RNAi. The commencement of this trial is a significant milestone for Tekmira. We are excited to move forward and expect to be in a position to report interim data from the Phase 1 trial in the second half of 2011."
The Phase 1 clinical trial, conducted at three medical centers in the United States, will be an open label, multi-dose, dose-escalation study designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of TKM-PLK1 as well as the determination of the maximum tolerated dose. The trial will enroll up to 52 patients with advanced solid tumors. Secondary objectives of the trial will be to measure tumor response as well as the pharmacodynamic effects of TKM-PLK1 in patients providing biopsies.
In addition to the Phase 1 human clinical trial, Tekmira is continuing discussions with the United States National Cancer Institute to design a second clinical trial to directly measure PLK1 knockdown and RNAi activity.
TKM-PLK1 consists of a Tekmira proprietary lipid nanoparticle (LNP) formulation that encapsulates small interfering RNA (siRNA) designed to silence PLK1. TKM-PLK1 has been shown in preclinical animal studies to selectively kill cancer cells, while sparing normal cells in healthy tissue. PLK1 plays a key role in a number of significant cancer indications including colorectal, breast, non-small cell lung, and ovarian cancers. These diseases collectively affect more than 500,000 new patients each year in the United States.
Date: December 22, 2010
Source: Tekmira Pharmaceuticals Corporation 

Vertex Halts Part of HCV Trial

Vertex Halts Part of HCV Trial
Drug Discovery & Development - December 22, 2010


CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc. said it stopped part of a midstage clinical study evaluating a combination of two hepatitis C drugs.
The company said the combination of telaprevir and VX-222 was not working. The study was designed to evaluate telaprevir and VX-222 alone, without other hepatitis C therapies. In October, Vertex stopped another portion of the trial that also involved only telaprevir and VX-222. That part of the study used a lower dose of VX-222.
The company said there are three remaining arms in the study. Two arms of the study are testing a combination of telaprevir, VX-222, and two older drugs, Pegasys and Copegus. The third arm tests telaprevir, VX-222, and Copegus without Pegasys. Each arm of the study is intended to last 12 weeks.
Telaprevir is Vertex's primary drug candidate. It asked the Food and Drug Administration to approve marketing of telaprevir in November, and it is hoping the agency will respond by May.
Date: December 21, 2010
Source: Associated Press

FDA Rejects Acetadote Expanded Use

FDA Rejects Acetadote Expanded Use
Drug Discovery & Development - December 22, 2010


NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Cumberland Pharmaceuticals Inc. said the Food and Drug Administration rejected the company's request to expand approval for the liver failure drug Acetadote.
The drug is already approved to treat liver failure caused by an overdose of the painkiller ingredient acetaminophen. The company was asking for expanded approval as a treatment for liver failure caused by factors other than an overdose of acetaminophen.
The agency said that studies had not proved the drug was effective enough for the additional use. The company disagrees and plans to meet with the agency to discuss its options.
Date: December 22, 2010
Source: Associated Press

Arena Reapplying for Approval of Lorcaserin

Arena Reapplying for Approval of Lorcaserin
Drug Discovery & Development - December 22, 2010


SAN DIEGO (AP) - Arena Pharmaceuticals Inc. said it plans to again ask the Food and Drug Administration to approve its experimental weight-loss drug lorcaserin by the end of 2011, following the agency's recent rejection over safety concerns.
Lorcaserin, being developed with Eisai Inc., is Arena's most advanced clinical product and a major potential revenue producer. The company made the announcement after it completed a review meeting with the agency. It said it will continue to "refine elements" of its plan to again ask for approval.
In October, the agency rejected lorcaserin and potential competitor Vivus Inc.'s Qnexa because of safety concerns. Both the drugs had been given negative recommendations by an FDA panel of experts prior to the agency's rejection. Specifically, the agency was concerned that about tumors seen in rats in early-stage lorcaserin testing, one of the factors that Arena Pharmaceuticals said the FDA had cited in a letter responding to the company's application. In addition, the FDA has said the drug was only marginally effective in overweight and obese individuals without type 2 diabetes.
Meanwhile, competitor Vivus plans on meeting with the agency in January and has already asked European regulators to approve Qnexa. The FDA rejected the drug initially because of concerns over potential heart problems and birth defects.
So far, Orexigen Therapeutics Inc.'s Contrave is the only weight-loss drug to gain a positive recommendation from a panel of FDA experts. The FDA is scheduled to make a decision on the drug by Jan. 31.
Date: December 22, 2010
Source: Associated Press

lunes, 27 de diciembre de 2010

Myrexis Has Begun Phase 2 Azixa Trial

Myrexis Has Begun Phase 2 Azixa Trial
Drug Discovery & Development - December 23, 2010


Myrexis, Inc., a biotechnology company focused on discovering, developing, and commercializing novel treatments for cancer, today announced it has initiated a controlled two-arm Phase 2b clinical study of Azixa (verubulin) as a front-line treatment for glioblastoma multiforme (GBM).
In previous Phase 2 studies, Azixa demonstrated potent, durable antitumor responses without any additive toxicity. The study initiated earlier this week will enroll up to 120 newly diagnosed GBM patients at treatment centers in the United States and India in order to evaluate Azixa combination therapy as a first-line GBM treatment. The trial will compare standard of care with standard of care in combination with Azixa.
"Our previous clinical studies have suggested that treatment with Azixa early in a patient's disease and in combination with chemotherapeutics, may result in improved outcomes. For that reason we have decided to evaluate Azixa as a first-line GBM therapy in combination with the standard of care," stated Dr. Adrian Hobden, Chief Executive Officer of Myrexis. "Our objective in designing the comparative Phase 2b study is to support a pivotal Phase 3 program that will bring us closer to approval and commercialization of Azixa."
Myrexis is currently evaluating Azixa as a second- and third-line GBM treatment in an ongoing Phase 2a single-agent study. The Company recently presented promising preliminary data for the first GBM population of patients who have failed both first-line temozolomide and second-line Avastin treatments, and expects to report data from the second sub-group, which consists of recurrent GBM patients who are naive to Avastin treatment in the first half of 2011.
Date: December 22, 2010
Source: Myrexis, Inc. 

ProSavin Performs Well in Parkinson's Trial

ProSavin Performs Well in Parkinson's Trial
Drug Discovery & Development - December 23, 2010


Oxford BioMedica plc, a leading gene therapy company, announces new data from the on-going Phase 1/2 trial of ProSavin for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease (PD). Three-month data from the third patient cohort show that ProSavin continues to be safe and well-tolerated following treatment with a 2x dose using an enhanced administration technique developed by the Company. The enhanced technique has been shown to reduce the surgical delivery time, will facilitate higher dosing and has the potential to provide better reproducibility of administration as study centres expand.
By way of background, the current Phase 1/2 study is designed to assess the safety, efficacy and dose evaluation of ProSavin in patients with mid-stage PD who are experiencing reduced benefit on L-DOPA “equivalent” therapy. To date, nine patients have been treated in cohorts of three. In June 2010, Oxford BioMedica reported 24-month results from the first cohort which received a 1x dose of  ProSavin, in addition to 12-month results from the second cohort which received a 2x dose of ProSavin. Motor function is assessed according to the Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Score (UPDRS) in patients’ “OFF” state (i.e. after withdrawal of PD medication). Quality of life is assessed based on a standard measure of clinical benefit using a patient questionnaire known as PDQ-39. Patients from the third cohort who received a 2x dose of  ProSavin using the Company’s enhanced administration technique have now reached their three-month assessment:
Highlights of third cohort at three months (2x dose, enhanced administration)
• Favourable safety profile with no serious adverse events related to  ProSavin or the enhanced administration technique;
• Average motor function improvement of 26%, consistent with 28% improvement using the old administration technique at the 2x dose, with a maximum of 52% improvement in one patient;
• All three patients show improvements in at least one indicator of clinical benefit; and
• Surgery delivery time for the 2x dose reduced by approximately 50%.

Highlights across all treatment cohorts (total of nine patients)• Patient diary data show an increase in “ON” time (when PD symptoms are not present) in all three cohorts;
• L-DOPA “equivalent” therapy has either reduced or remained stable in all three cohorts, in what is usually a progressively degenerative disease requiring an increase in dose;
• Quality of life has either improved or remained stable in all three cohorts, again where it would usually be expected to worsen; and
 • ProSavin continues to have a favourable safety profile 30 months post-treatment (1x dose) and 18 months post-treatment (2x dose);
• As previously reported, 1x dose data showed average motor function improvement of 20% at 24-months (with a maximum of 30% in one patient) and 2x dose data showed average motor function improvement of 29% at 12-months (with a maximum of 56% in one patient).
The study’s independent Data Monitoring Committee (DMC) has reviewed the data and supports the Company’s proposal to proceed to a 5x dose, facilitated by the enhanced administration technique, in a six-patient cohort. Importantly, the 5x human dose is the allometrically-scaled equivalent (i.e. a dose that is scaled for the difference in brain size between humans and the pre-clinical model) to the highly efficacious pre-clinical dose published in Jarraya et al. Sci Transl Med. 2009 Oct 14;1(2). The DMC also gave its approval to open the second site in the UK at Addenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge, with Dr Roger Barker as Principal Investigator, which will recruit some of the six patients into the 5x dose cohort.
Oxford BioMedica plans to initiate treatment of the 5x dose cohort in Q1 2011. To date, nine patients have been treated at the Henri Mondor Hospital, Paris, with Professor Stéphane Palfi as Principal Investigator. The first patient in the 5x dose cohort will be treated in Paris, one month after which subsequent patients can be treated in parallel at both sites which is expected to increase the rate of recruitment and treatment. Results from the first three patients in the 5x dose cohort are expected in mid-2011. Depending on the efficacy seen with the 5x dose, a Phase II trial of  ProSavin could be initiated in the EU/US in 2012 and planning is underway for this stage of the development programme.
Date: December 22, 2010
Source: Oxford BioMedica plc 

ADVANCE-3 Study Shows Superiority of Apixaban

ADVANCE-3 Study Shows Superiority of Apixaban
Drug Discovery & Development - December 23, 2010


Bristol-Myers Squibb Company and Pfizer Inc. announced that the ADVANCE-3 study results, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, showed apixaban was statistically superior to 40 mg once daily enoxaparin in reducing the incidence of venous thromboembolism in patients undergoing elective total hip replacement surgery. The study results also showed comparable rates of the composite of major and clinically relevant non-major bleeding, including surgical site bleeding, in patients treated with apixaban compared with those treated with enoxaparin.
Patients undergoing major orthopedic surgery, including total hip replacement, are at high risk for venous thromboembolism. In fact, venous thromboembolism occurs in 40 percent to 60 percent of patients undergoing orthopedic surgery who do not receive preventive care. With close to 200,000 hip replacement surgeries performed each year in the United States, the threat of venous thromboembolism and its associated morbidity and mortality risk represent a growing challenge to physicians.
Apixaban is an investigational, oral, highly selective Factor Xa inhibitor, part of a class of agents being studied for their potential to prevent and treat blood clots in the veins and arteries. Results of ADVANCE-3 were first presented in July 2010, at the 21st International Congress on Thrombosis in Milan, Italy.
“One of the major concerns for orthopedic surgeons using oral anticoagulants for venous thromboembolism prevention in hip surgery is the significant risk of bleeding,” said Michael Rud Lassen, M.D., Hoersholm Hospital in Copenhagen, Denmark, lead investigator for the study. “We are encouraged by the ADVANCE-3 data, which demonstrated that apixaban provides more effective thromboprophylaxis without an increased risk of bleeding, when compared with enoxaparin, and has the advantages of oral administration, which is particularly beneficial once patients leave the hospital.”
Date: December 22, 2010
Source: Bristol-Myers Squibb Company 

New Drug Class May Treat Anemia

New Drug Class May Treat Anemia
Drug Discovery & Development - December 23, 2010


By determining how corticosteroids act to promote red blood cell progenitor formation, Whitehead Institute researchers have identified a class of drugs that may be beneficial in anemias, including those resulting from trauma, sepsis, malaria, kidney dialysis, and chemotherapy.
Anemia occurs due to a breakdown in erythropoiesis, the multi-step process that creates red blood cells. Some common anemias can be treated with a recombinant form of the hormone erythropoietin (EPO), which normally stimulates red blood-cell production at a fairly early stage of erythropoiesis.
However, certain anemias fail to respond to EPO, creating a large unmet medical need. In the case of Diamond Blackfan anemia (DBA), patients lack a sufficient number of EPO-responsive cells. Instead, corticosteroids such as prednisone or prednisolone are used to treat DBA, although it has been unclear exactly how these agents affect erythropoiesis.
To see how corticosteroids are able to increase red blood cell counts, Johan Flygare, a postdoctoral researcher in the lab of Whitehead Institute Founding Member Harvey Lodish, purified two progenitors of red blood cells, called burst forming unit-erythroids (BFU-Es) and colony forming unit-erythroids (CFU-Es), from mouse fetal liver cells. During erythropoiesis, BFU-Es produce CFU-Es, which are then stimulated by EPO to generate the pro-erythroblasts that eventually become red blood cells. By dividing numerous times before maturing, both BFU-Es and CFU-Es have a limited ability to self-renew. When Flygare exposed BFU-Es and CFU-Es in vitro to a corticosteroid, only the BFU-Es responded--dividing 13 times instead of the usual 9 times before maturing into CFU-Es. These additional cell divisions ultimately led to a 13-fold increase in red blood-cell production.
Flygare identified 83 genes in BFU-Es that are stimulated by the corticosteroid, and he examined the promoters that facilitate those genes' transcription. The promoters appeared to have binding sites for a transcription factor, called hypoxia-induced factor 1-alpha (HIF1-alpha), that is activated when an organism is deprived of oxygen. To prolong the 83 genes' promotion by HIF1-alpha, Flygare used a class of drugs known as prolyl hydroxylase inhibitors (PHIs), which extends HIF1-alpha's effectiveness. PHIs have also been used in early-stage clinical trials to increase EPO production.
When Flygare added both a corticosteroid and a PHI to BFU-Es in culture, the cells produced 300 times more red blood cells than did cells without exposure to the drugs. Flygare repeated the experiment with adult human BFU-Es, and found that a corticosteroid plus a PHI generated 10 times more red blood cells than BFU-Es exposed to a corticosteroid alone.
Flygare hopes this research eventually leads to improved treatment for DBA patients who currently suffer from a host of corticosteroid-induced side effects, including decreased bone density, immunosuppression, stunted growth, and cataracts.
"If you could lower the dose of steroids so DBA patients would get just a little bit, and then add on this kind of drug, like a PHI, that would boost the effect, maybe you could get around the steroids' side effects," says Flygare. "That would be good."
This new approach to increasing erythropoiesis by extending the self-renewal of BFU-Es—resulting in creation of more EPO-responsive cells—could lead to novel therapies for other anemias.
"There are a number of anemias that are much more prevalent than DBA and that cannot be treated with EPO, either, such as anemias from trauma, sepsis, malaria, and anemia in kidney dialysis patients," says Lodish, who is also a professor of biology and bioengineering at MIT. "Whether these treatments will work in those conditions remains to be seen."
Date: December 22, 2010
Source: Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research 

Phase 2 Antibody Trial Successful

Phase 2 Antibody Trial Successful
Drug Discovery & Development - June 16, 2010


Bristol-Myers Squibb Company and Alder Biopharmaceuticals announced that new data from a dose-ranging Phase 2a trial support further development of BMS-945429/ALD518, an investigational monoclonal antibody directed against interleukin-6 (IL-6), as a potential treatment for rheumatoid arthritis (RA). The Phase 2a data will be presented in a scientific session on June 18, 2010, at the Annual Congress of the European League against Rheumatism (EULAR).
The 16-week Phase 2a study evaluated the safety and efficacy of BMS-945429/ALD518 in 132 patients with RA inadequately controlled with methotrexate. Patients were randomized to receive intravenous infusions of 80 mg, 160 mg or 320 mg of BMS-945429/ALD518 or placebo once every 8 weeks, for a total of two doses. Efficacy was measured by ACR scores, a standardized measure of percentage improvement in RA signs and symptoms. All three treatment groups met the primary endpoint of statistically significant improvements in the ACR20 score over placebo at Week 12. At Week 16, ACR20 responses were observed in 75% – 82% of subjects receiving 80, 160 and 320 mg doses versus 36% of subjects receiving placebo; ACR50 responses were achieved in 41% – 50% of subjects receiving BMS-945429/ALD518 versus 15% of subject receiving placebo; and ACR70 responses were noted in 22% – 43% of subjects receiving BMS-945429/ALD518 versus 6% of subjects receiving placebo.
The most commonly reported adverse events were increases in liver enzymes (17% in BMS-945429/ALD518 versus 0% in placebo), and these were most frequent in the 320 mg dose group. Four patients discontinued study drug due to liver enzyme abnormalities. Transient neutropenias and increases in cholesterol were also observed in all dose groups. No serious infections, infusion reactions or immunogenicity were observed.
“BMS-945429/ALD518 is one of the first monoclonal antibodies targeted at the IL-6 cytokine to show clinical activity in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, thus providing proof of concept,” said Philip Mease, M.D., investigator, Swedish Hospital Clinical Research Division, Seattle, Washington. “I look forward to the next phase of clinical development that will provide additional understanding of the efficacy and safety profile of this antibody.”
Based on this data, Bristol-Myers Squibb and Alder, under a collaboration agreement signed in November 2009, will continue to pursue development of BMS-945429/ALD518 in rheumatoid arthritis. Under the collaboration agreement, Alder granted to Bristol-Myers Squibb worldwide exclusive rights to develop and commercialize BMS-945429/ALD518 for all potential indications, except cancer.
Date: June 15, 2010
Source: Bristol-Myers Squibb Company 

Eli And Amylin Ask for Expanded Byetta Approval

Eli And Amylin Ask for Expanded Byetta Approval
Drug Discovery & Development - December 23, 2010


NEW YORK (AP) - Eli Lilly and Co. and Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc. said they are asking the Food and Drug Administration to expand approval for their type 2 diabetes drug Byetta.
The drugmakers asked the FDA to approve Byetta for use along with basal insulin, which is insulin that patients take to control their blood sugar levels when they are not eating. The FDA first approved Byetta in April 2005, allowing the companies to market the drug to patients who were taking oral diabetes drugs but did not have their blood sugar under control. In October 2009, it expanded that approval so the companies could market Byetta to patients not using any other medications.
Byetta is approved for use along with diet and exercise. An additional approval could bolster sales as the companies try to get approval for a new, longer-lasting version of the drug.
Eli Lilly, Amylin, and Alkermes Inc. are trying to get FDA approval for a new version of Byetta that is called Bydureon. Bydureon is intended to be injected once a week, compared to Byetta, which is injected twice a day. But the FDA declined to approve Bydureon in October and asked the companies for more data about the drug. The companies say they hope to provide that data by the end of 2011. The FDA will then take at least six months to review the new data.
Revenue from Byetta has slumped since 2008, when the drug was linked to cases of acute pancreatitis.
Date: December 22, 2010
Source: Associated Press

miércoles, 22 de diciembre de 2010

Prestige Buys Dramamine for $76M

Prestige Buys Dramamine for $76M
Drug Discovery & Development - December 20, 2010


IRVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Consumer products company Prestige Brands Holdings Inc. said it is buying Johnson & Johnson's U.S. Dramamine business for $76 million in cash in a move to expand its over-the-counter brands.
Dramamine is an over-the-counter medication for motion sickness sold by J&J's McNeil PPC unit. Prestige said the product has estimated market share in the U.S. of 32 percent.
It is the second large acquisition for the company in the past few months. In September, Prestige agreed to pay $190 million for Blacksmith Brands Holdings Inc., whose brands include Luden's throat drops, PediaCare children's products, Efferdent denture cleansers, Effergrip denture cream and NasalCrom allergy medication. Prestige already owns consumer products such as Clear Eyes solution and Chloraseptic sore throat relievers.
Over the counter products will now make up more than 75 percent of its revenue. The deal is expected to close by the end of January and will add to profit in 2012, the company said. Prestige expects to use cash on hand as well as bank and bond financing to complete the purchase.
Date: December 20, 2010
Source: Associated Press

FDA Extends Brilinta Review

FDA Extends Brilinta Review
Drug Discovery & Development - December 20, 2010


WASHINGTON (AP) - AstraZeneca said the Food and Drug Administration has again extended its review of the experimental blood thinner Brilinta, the second delay this year for one of the company's potential blockbuster products.
The London-based company said in a statement the agency requested a new analysis from the company's 18,000-patient study comparing its drug to the market-leading Plavix. The international study showed better outcomes for patients taking Brilinta overall, though U.S. patients actually fared worse.
The FDA did not ask the company to conduct additional studies of the drug, which could have taken millions of dollars and several years to produce.
Jefferies International analyst Jeffrey Holford said the FDA's request would push the drug's approval to the second half of 2011.
"This delay will come as a disappointment to many and may also start to raise uncertainties about the potential scale of the product's likely commercial success," Holford said in a note.
Holford added that AstraZeneca faces substantial exposure to generic competition over the next six years as patents on some of its drugs expire. Brilinta is one of the company's few upcoming products with blockbuster potential. The drug has already received European approval.
A positive decision from FDA would allow Brilinta to compete against Plavix and Eli Lilly and Co.'s Effient in the U.S. With sales of $5.6 billion, Plavix was the third-best selling drug in the U.S. last year. Lilly's drug, which launched last summer, has faced an uphill climb with weaker sales.
In July, FDA advisory committee members voted 7 to 1 to recommend the approval of Brilinta in patients with acute coronary syndrome, or blocked arteries. The FDA was first scheduled to make a decision on the drug in September, but said it needed more time for its review.

PharmaNet Offering Biosimilar Guidance

PharmaNet Offering Biosimilar Guidance
Drug Discovery & Development - December 20, 2010


PharmaNet Development Group, Inc., a leading provider of drug development services to the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, generic drug and medical device industries, announced that its regulatory and pharmaceutical development experts are available to offer guidance on the regulatory pathway for biosimilar development in the United States, following a recent Food and Drug Administration (FDA) hearing. The two day public hearing aimed to obtain input from interested stakeholders on specific issues and challenges associated with the implementation of the Biologics Price Competition and Innovation Act of 2009 (BPCI Act).
PharmaNet recently attended the two day FDA hearing. While the FDA hearing highlighted the diverse approaches and opinions presented by different industry participants, PharmaNet in-house experts, including some former senior level officials from the FDA, are available to offer insight into industry and regulatory perspectives. As an industry leading CRO with experience in clinical development and regulatory issues of branded innovator biologics and generic drugs, the Company is available to provide advice to industry members developing biosimilars.
"At PharmaNet, we believe that patient safety (immunogenicity) will emerge as a key issue and that carefully designed clinical trials will be crucial in this process. It is extremely important that these issues are openly and frankly discussed, commented Jeffrey Freitag, M.D., Senior Vice President.
"This hearing was an excellent forum for the FDA to receive valuable input from a range of interested stakeholders. While the regulatory pathway is still to be determined, the opinions expressed should help the FDA develop guidance going forward." PharmaNet provides large molecule bioanalytical services, including immunogenicity testing, for the development of biologics and biosimilars.
Biosimilars are new but not identical versions of biologic products that have reached patent expiration. In 2006, the European Medicines Agency
(EMEA) became the first regulatory body to establish a pathway and provide guidance for biosimilar approval. With the passage of The Affordable Healthcare for Americans Act in March 2010, a regulatory pathway was established in the US allowing for implementation of the BPCI Act. The FDA Implementation of the BPCI Act establishes an abbreviated approval pathway for biological products that demonstrate to be "highly similar" or "interchangeable" with an already FDA-licensed biological product. An abbreviated approval pathway for biological products will present challenges given the scientific and technical complexities associated with the larger and often more complex structures of biological products and will create much debate and diverse opinions among stakeholders as demonstrated at the recent 2-day FDA hearing.
During the hearing, views were exchanged between the FDA, consumer advocates and major industry stakeholders including pharmaceutical innovator companies, biosimilar drug development companies, drug distribution entities, and clinical research organizations (CROs). While all parties generally agreed on the benefits of lower cost biologics, there seemed to be two differing positions on how to accomplish that. One position focused on the need to obtain sufficient pre-clinical and robust clinical data to ensure safety and efficacy, did not favor automatic interchangeablility, and was cautious about extrapolation to other indications without appropriate studies. The other position favored more emphasis on the demonstration of analytical similarity with less emphasis on conducting what might be unnecessary pre-clinical animal and clinical studies. This second position also favored interchangeability and extrapolation to other indications.
Consumer groups were particularly concerned about safety and efficacy issues with overly aggressive abbreviated development programs. It also became apparent that innovative trial designs would likely be needed to allow for a reasonably sized clinical program to be accomplished. Finally, it was acknowledged that the biosimilar drug development/approval in Europe has been smooth and generally without problems; therefore, a question was raised as to why those approved biosimilars could not enter the US market with minimal additional development effort.

Teva Leading Generic Company in Europe

Teva Leading Generic Company in Europe
Drug Discovery & Development - December 20, 2010


Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. announced that it has completed the acquisition of ratiopharm, Germany's second largest generics producer. Following the acquisition, Teva will be the number one generic company in Europe, holding the leading market position in ten countries, as well as ranking in the top three in seven additional countries. In addition, the transaction will significantly increase Teva's sales in Canada.

"This is an exciting day for Teva and ratiopharm," said Shlomo Yanai, Teva's President and CEO. "Teva, the world's leading generic pharmaceutical company, will now become the number one generics company in Europe as well. Increasing Teva's market share in Europe - a geography with tremendous potential for generics penetration - is an important pillar of our long-term growth strategy. With the acquisition of ratiopharm we will become the leader in key European markets and we are well-positioned to become the leader in many other European markets in the near future."

Mr. Yanai added, "We have great respect for ratiopharm's tradition of leadership, and their dedication to excellence and quality. We are thrilled to welcome ratiopharm's outstanding team into the Teva family, and we are confident that the combined experience of the Teva and ratiopharm teams will ensure a quick, smooth, and successful integration process. Together we will continue to make affordable, high-quality medicine accessible to more and more patients across Europe".

Oliver Windholz, Chief Executive Officer of ratiopharm, said, "We are proud to join the Teva family. We have long viewed Teva as the right match for our company, thanks to its clearly defined strategic vision and commitment to generic medicines and its highly reputable management. We look forward to making this acquisition a success story both for our employees and for Teva, and will do our utmost to leverage ratiopharm's activities into a truly advantageous business for Teva."

The ratiopharm acquisition was structured as a 'locked box' transaction. Accordingly, Teva paid 3.625 billion euro for the ratiopharm shares, which reflects the agreed enterprise value (on a cash free/debt free basis), plus accrued interest from January 1, 2010 to the closing date, which totaled 186 million euro. Teva benefited from all increases in equity and assets of ratiopharm from that date. The U.S dollar consideration paid by Teva was approximately $4.95 billion.

As previously announced, Teva expects synergies of at least $400 million, which should be fully realized within three years.
Date: August 20, 2010
Source: Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. 

New regulatory pathway for approving biosimilars or follow-on biological drugs

Mylan Sued Over Orapred Application

Mylan Sued Over Orapred Application
Drug Discovery & Development - December 20, 2010


CANONSBURG, Pa. (AP) - Mylan Inc. confirmed that it has been sued by Shionogi Pharma Inc. and Cima Labs Inc. over an application filed with the Food and Drug Administration to make a generic version of Orapred, a steroid used to reduce inflammation in asthma and other conditions.
The Canonsburg, Pa., company said it believes it is the first company to have filed a substantially complete abbreviated new drug application for three doses of the drug, and it expects to qualify for six months of marketing exclusivity after receiving FDA approval.
Orapred ODT had U.S. sales of about $28 million for the 12 months that ended Sept. 30. Mylan currently has 164 abbreviated new drug applications pending with the FDA.
Date: December 20, 2010
Source: Associated Press

viernes, 17 de diciembre de 2010

Rivaroxaban Superior to Warfarin in Reducing Stroke Risk

Rivaroxaban Superior to Warfarin in Reducing Stroke Risk
Drug Discovery & Development - December 16, 2010


Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research & Development, L.L.C. announced that results from the pivotal Phase 3 double-blind ROCKET AF trial showed rivaroxaban given once daily was superior in reducing the risk of stroke and non-CNS systemic embolism in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) with comparable safety versus warfarin, the most commonly used medicine for the prevention of stroke in AF patients.
In the study, rivaroxaban was superior to warfarin for the primary efficacy endpoint, showing a 21% relative risk reduction (RRR) for stroke and non-CNS systemic embolism in the pre-specified on-treatment population (1.7% vs. 2.2%, respectively, p=0.015). Additionally, in the intent to treat population (ITT), which followed all patients randomized in the trial until its completion, whether or not they completed the full course of therapy or switched to other options, rivaroxaban showed comparable benefits to warfarin (2.1% vs. 2.4%, p<0.001 for non-inferiority). This result indicates that the treatment benefits compared to warfarin were sustained as long as the patients received rivaroxaban.
Rivaroxaban-treated patients also had numerically fewer myocardial infarctions (0.9% vs. 1.1%, p=0.121), and an observed reduction in rates of all-cause mortality compared to warfarin (1.9% vs. 2.2%, p=0.073), though these results were not statistically significantly different.
For the principal safety measure, rivaroxaban showed similar rates of major and non-major clinically relevant bleeding events, compared to warfarin (14.9% vs. 14.5%, p=0.442). Rates of major bleeding were also comparable between rivaroxaban and warfarin (3.6% vs. 3.5%, p=0.576). Patients treated with rivaroxaban had fewer intracranial hemorrhages (0.5% vs. 0.7%, p=0.019), critical organ bleeds (0.8% vs. 1.2%, p=0.007) and bleeding-related deaths (0.2% vs. 0.5%, p=0.003) compared to those treated with warfarin, but showed increased rates of hemoglobin/hematocrit drop (2.8% vs. 2.3%, p=0.019) and transfusions (1.7% vs. 1.3%, p=0.044), compared to warfarin. The frequency of abnormal laboratory values of liver function was balanced between the treatment groups. Rivaroxaban had similar rates of discontinuation due to adverse events compared to warfarin, and did not require routine laboratory coagulation monitoring.
“Given the prevalence and morbidity associated with atrial fibrillation, and the well-known difficulties with warfarin use, it is exciting to have an alternative which was documented in this study to be effective with no increase in significant bleeding,” said Robert M. Califf, M.D., study co-chairman and Vice Chancellor for Clinical Research from Duke University.
With 14,264 randomized patients, ROCKET AF is the largest double-blind study completed to date for the prevention of stroke in patients with AF. The study compared oral, once-daily rivaroxaban (20 mg, or 15 mg in patients with moderate renal insufficiency) to dose-adjusted warfarin.
“Results from the ROCKET AF study suggest that rivaroxaban has the potential to offer protection for the millions of Americans living with atrial fibrillation who carry the risk of suffering a stroke, which is often devastating and disabling,” said Peter M. DiBattiste, M.D., Vice President of Cardiovascular Development at Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research & Development, L.L.C.
This is the seventh consecutive Phase 3 trial in the ongoing rivaroxaban global development program that has demonstrated either non-inferiority or superiority to standard of care.
Date: November 15, 2010
Source: Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research & Development, L.L.C. 

StemCells Files Application for Spinal Injury Trial

StemCells Files Application for Spinal Injury Trial
Drug Discovery & Development - December 16, 2010


StemCells, Inc. announced that is has filed an application with Swissmedic, the Swiss regulatory agency for therapeutic products, to conduct a clinical trial in Switzerland of the Company's HuCNS-SC purified human neural stem cells in chronic spinal cord injury patients. If authorized, the study would enroll patients who are three to 12 months post-injury.
"With this filing we have taken a tangible step to broaden the clinical development of our HuCNS-SC product candidate beyond the brain and into the spinal cord," said Martin McGlynn, President and CEO of StemCells, Inc. "This exciting initiative is supported by extensive preclinical research demonstrating the ability of our proprietary cells to restore lost motor function when transplanted in the chronic spinal cord injury setting. The prospect of extending the treatment window to months or longer following injury would mean that a much larger population of injured patients could potentially benefit from such an approach."
Stephen Huhn, MD, FACS, FAAP, Vice President and Head of the CNS Program at StemCells, Inc., added, "Switzerland is home to some of the leading clinicians and medical centers in the world engaged in the treatment and rehabilitation of spinal cord injury patients, which makes it an excellent setting for this type of trial. While we have yet to secure Swissmedic authorization to initiate the study, we are pleased to have already received approval from the respective ethics committees at our anticipated trial site and the local Canton, both of which are prerequisites for making a submission of this kind in Switzerland."
The results of numerous collaborative preclinical studies with researchers at the University of California, Irvine (UCI) demonstrate the significant therapeutic potential of the Company's human neural stem cells for the treatment of spinal cord injury. Data published in several peer-reviewed journals show that the cells engraft, migrate along the spinal cord to the point of injury, and then differentiate into neurons and specialized cells called oligodendrocytes that create the insulation (myelin) necessary for proper transmission of nerve impulses from the brain to below the level of injury. When transplanted in spinal cord-injured mice at both sub-acute and chronic injury time points, the cells have been shown to form protective myelin sheaths around damaged nerve axons and enable a significant and persistent recovery of walking ability.
Aileen Anderson, Ph.D., Associate Professor in the Departments of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, and Anatomy and Neurobiology at UCI, commented, "The preclinical data we have seen to date provide a compelling rationale for advancing these neural stem cells into clinical testing for chronic spinal cord injury. Restoring some degree of function for patients at later time points beyond the acute injury phase could have a transformative impact on the field as there are no effective treatment options for them today. The demonstrated ability of these cells to repair an injured spinal cord and promote functional motor recovery in animals could translate into improved quality of life for individuals living with paralysis, and I am excited to see StemCells take this important next step toward what I hope will one day become a viable therapy for a broad population of spinal cord-injured patients."
Date: November 15, 2010
Source: StemCells, Inc. 

SciClone Drug Fails in HCV Study

SciClone Drug Fails in HCV Study
Drug Discovery & Development - December 16, 2010


SciClone Pharmaceuticals Inc. said that its drug candidate SCV-07 failed to meet its key goal of treating Hepatitis C in a midstage study, prompting a cancellation of the program.
The company said the study was aimed at providing an estimate of whether SCV-07 could be a potential treatment for Hepatitis C, which is a viral condition that damages the liver.
"Although the data showed an interesting biological signal, due to the rapidly changing landscape of effective treatments which increase the complexity and risks of developing drugs in chronic Hepatitis C, we have decided not to continue development in this indication," said President and CEO Friedhelm Blobel, in a statement.
In March, the drug candidate failed in a midstage study on oral mucositis, which is an inflammation of the digestive tract. It is a common side effect of patients undergoing chemotherapy for head and neck cancer.
The company plans to start another midstage study in 2011 aimed at oral mucositis involving higher doses of the drug candidate.
Date: December 15, 2010
Source: Associated Press

First Trial Results for Acceleron AMD Drug

First Trial Results for Acceleron AMD Drug
Drug Discovery & Development - December 16, 2010


Acceleron Pharma, Inc., a biopharmaceutical company developing novel protein therapeutics that regulate the growth and development of tissues and cells, including muscle, bone, red blood cells, and vasculature, announced the presentation of interim results from the first-in-human clinical study of ACE-041 in patients with advanced cancer at the 22nd EORTC-NCI-AACR Symposium on Molecular Targets and Cancer Therapeutics in Berlin, Germany.  The presentation was given by Professor Sunil Sharma, the Jon and Karen Huntsman Presidential Professor of Cancer Research at the Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah.
“It has been very encouraging to see so many signals of efficacy in this trial, in particular because these are end-stage cancer patients,” said Dr. Sunil Sharma.  “It is also important to note that while we have demonstrated significant activity with ACE-041 monotherapy in this study, we might expect to see even more efficacy in future studies with ACE-041 used in combination with other therapies.”
“The clinical activity and safety profile of ACE-041 confirms our understanding that the ALK1 pathway plays a fundamental and distinct role compared to the VEGF-axis in tumor angiogenesis,” said Dr. Matthew Sherman, M.D., Chief Medical Officer at Acceleron Pharma. “This has significant implications because nearly all patients treated with VEGF inhibitors eventually either fail therapy or develop resistance to these drugs. There is a tremendous need for novel therapies that go beyond VEGF to target the tumor blood supply.”
In a phase 1, first-in-human clinical study, patients with advanced-stage tumors were treated with multiple ascending doses of ACE-041, to evaluate the safety and pharmacokinetics of ACE-041. This study also explored antitumor activity of ACE-041.
Summary of interim findings presented:
• ACE-041 subcutaneously (SC) injected once every three weeks (q3w) is generally well-tolerated
• Common side effects include mild or moderate peripheral edema, fatigue, nausea, headache, anorexia, and anemia. A single case of Grade 3 congestive heart failure was reported
• Toxicities commonly associated with VEGF inhibition (hypertension, proteinuria, or bleeding) have not been observed
• ACE-041 pharmacokinetics support dosing every 3 weeks
• One patient with refractory head and neck cancer achieved a partial response and three patients had prolonged disease stabilization
• Rapid reduction in tumor metabolic activity observed in several patients, measured by FDG-PET imaging
• An expanded cohort study is ongoing at the dose level intended for Phase 2 studies
ACE-041 is being developed for the treatment of advanced cancer and age-related macular degeneration (AMD).
Date: November 19, 2010
Source: Acceleron Pharma, Inc. 

GenomeQuest Adds Chinese Patents to Research Service

GenomeQuest Adds Chinese Patents to Research Service
Drug Discovery & Development - December 16, 2010


GenomeQuest, a leader in sequence data management, announced that it has expanded its content for patent search to include sequences filed at SIPO, the patent office of China.  Already, over 40,000 sequences from over 5000 Chinese patents are indexed and searchable in GQ-IP, the company’s online patent research solution that now holds information on over 300,000 patents globally.
“Our preliminary analysis indicates that over 50% of Chinese patents with biological sequences are not filed in other country or international patent databases outside of SIPO,” said Kamalakar Gulukota, GenomeQuest Product Evangelist. “If your invention will be marketed in China, including SIPO in your patent search is required to ascertain the total patent landscape around your sequence.”
Indexed sequences from SIPO patent filings are immediately available to GQ-IP users.
Date: December 6, 2010
Source: GenomeQuest 

GenomeQuest Adds Chinese Patents to Research Service

GenomeQuest Adds Chinese Patents to Research Service
Drug Discovery & Development - December 16, 2010


GenomeQuest, a leader in sequence data management, announced that it has expanded its content for patent search to include sequences filed at SIPO, the patent office of China.  Already, over 40,000 sequences from over 5000 Chinese patents are indexed and searchable in GQ-IP, the company’s online patent research solution that now holds information on over 300,000 patents globally.
“Our preliminary analysis indicates that over 50% of Chinese patents with biological sequences are not filed in other country or international patent databases outside of SIPO,” said Kamalakar Gulukota, GenomeQuest Product Evangelist. “If your invention will be marketed in China, including SIPO in your patent search is required to ascertain the total patent landscape around your sequence.”
Indexed sequences from SIPO patent filings are immediately available to GQ-IP users.
Date: December 6, 2010
Source: GenomeQuest 

Hemispherx Releases Phase 3 Ampligen Data

Hemispherx Releases Phase 3 Ampligen Data
Drug Discovery & Development - December 16, 2010


Hemispherx Biopharma, Inc. announced the publication of a peer-reviewed article providing new data on Ampligen [rintatolimod;poly(I) * poly(C12,U)], an experimental therapeutic in Phase 3 clinical testing, in the current issue of The Journal of Applied Research. The report is entitled "Cardiac Toxicity in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS): Results from a Randomized 40-Week Multicenter Double-Blind Placebo Control Trial of Rintatolimod". Findings include discussion of the sedentary lifestyle produced by extreme fatigue which is a significant risk factor for heart disease, a leading cause of death in patients with CFS. Thus, cardiac abnormalities, including abnormal electrocardiograms (EKGs), are common in CFS patients despite their relatively young age.
The AMP-516, Phase 3 FDA-authorized study in CFS evaluated the therapeutic effectiveness of Ampligen(R), an experimental therapeutic, and included repeated measurements of the QT interval, a component of EKG testing. Prolongation of the EKG QT interval is a known risk factor in sudden cardiac death (Long QT Syndrome) due to the induction of fatal cardiac arrhythmias. A greater portion of the placebo patients were found to have a significant prolongation of the QT interval compared to patients who had received Ampligen twice weekly. The prolonged QT interval in the placebo group was associated with continued use of certain concomitant medications, which are known to prolong the QT interval and used by CFS patients in an attempt to mitigate symptoms of the disease. In contrast, patients randomized to receive Ampligen were able to significantly reduce their dependency on these same medications.
Concomitant medications which increase the QT interval may carry a "black box" warning on their labels since prolonged QT intervals are associated with cardiac arrhythmias which may result in sudden death.
The AMP-516 study was one of the studies submitted to FDA in the Ampligen NDA, which resulted in the previously-announced November 25, 2009 Complete Response Letter, in which FDA requested that additional data be generated and submitted on effectiveness measures and potential QT interval effects.
Date: November 22, 2010
Source: Hemispherx Biopharma, Inc. 

FDA Extends Cladribine Review Period

FDA Extends Cladribine Review Period
Drug Discovery & Development - December 16, 2010


Merck KGaA announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has extended its review period for Cladribine Tablets as a therapy for relapsing forms of multiple sclerosis (MS) by three months to February 28, 2011.
The FDA granted Priority Review status for Cladribine Tablets in July of 2010, reducing the standard 10-month review period to six months, which was set to end on November 28, 2010. The FDA extended the review period to provide additional time for a full review of additional information provided under the new drug application (NDA).
“Merck Serono continues to work closely with the FDA during the review process of the Cladribine Tablets new drug application,” said Bernhard Kirschbaum, Merck Serono’s Head of Global Research and Development. “We will continue working towards our goal of providing an oral disease-modifying drug for the treatment of relapsing multiple sclerosis.”
Date: December 15, 2010
Source: Merck KGaA 

jueves, 16 de diciembre de 2010

Researchers ID Memory Boosting Protein

Researchers ID Memory Boosting Protein
Drug Discovery & Development - December 15, 2010


UC Irvine researchers have identified a novel mechanism in the brain that boosts memory.
In collaboration with scientists at Germany's University of Munster, the UCI team found that a small protein called neuropeptide S can strengthen and prolong memories of everything from negative events to simple objects.
According to study leader Rainer Reinscheid, UCI associate professor of pharmaceutical sciences, the discovery could provide important clues about how the brain stores memories and also lead to new treatments for Alzheimer's disease, dementia and other cognitive impairments.
"Additionally, it may help us better understand post-traumatic stress disorder, which involves exaggerated memories of traumatic events," he said.
In tests on mice, the researchers observed that if neuropeptide S receptors in the brain were activated immediately after a learning experience, it could be recalled for much longer and with much greater intensity.
This memory enhancement lasted up to a week, Reinscheid said, but when NPS receptor activation was disrupted, the mice didn't remember events as strongly – if at all – when tested just a day or two later.
Study results, which appear in a Dec. 8 advance online article for the journal Neuropsychopharmacology, are in accordance with Reinscheid's previous findings that NPS causes wakefulness and has a calming effect.
"It appears that the combination of increased alertness and reduced anxiety produced by NPS prepares the animals to learn much better," he said. "Memory is remarkably improved after activation of their NPS system, and the effects are long-lasting, independent of content."
Date: December 14, 2010
Source: University of California - Irvine 

Cell Therapeutics Announces OPAXIO Data

Cell Therapeutics Announces OPAXIO Data
Drug Discovery & Development - December 15, 2010


Cell Therapeutics, Inc. announced the preliminary results of a phase 2 study of  paclitaxel poliglumex (OPAXIO) combined with temozolomide (TMZ) and radiotherapy (RT) in patients with newly diagnosed high-grade gliomas. The study was presented by Drs. Suriya Jeyapalan, Heinrich Elinzano and Mark Goldman, Assistant Professors of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Brown University Oncology Group at the 2010 Scientific Meeting of the Society of Neuro-Oncology in Montreal, Canada.  The trial demonstrated a high rate of complete and partial responses (CR and PR) and, an encouragingly high rate of 6 month progression-free survival (PFS).
"Standard therapy for patients with malignant brain tumors, like glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) employs a chemotherapy drug called temozolomide (TMZ) and radiation therapy (RT) and results in a PFS of 54% at 6 months. Paclitaxel poliglumex (PPX) is one of the most potent radiation sensitizers reported in the literature, selectively increasing tumor sensitivity to radiation up to 8 to 10 fold in animal models.  This is the first clinical trial evaluating the safety and effectiveness of the addition of PPX to standard TMZ and radiation for patients with GBM," said Dr. Suriya Jeyapalan. "We were impressed by the high rate of complete and overall responses and importantly the durability of responses with the 6 month progression free survival being substantially longer than that reported with TMZ and RT alone. Given that 55% of GBM tumors express MGMT, a gene responsible for inactivating the effectiveness of allkylating chemotherapy agents like TMZ, we are exploring whether or not PPX results in this trial were associated with anti-tumor activity in this otherwise TMZ resistant population which could lead to an accelerated clinical development path for PPX in MGMT+ GBM."
In the current study, 25 patients were enrolled with confirmed high-grade glioma, 17 had GBM or gliosarcoma.  Patients received PPX with TMZ and RT for six weeks.  The main toxicity was grade 4 thrombocytopenia and neutropenia in 6/25 patients, 5 patients of which were receiving concomitant medications which are known to be associated with thrombocytopenia; only 1 of 14 patients not receiving these concomitant medication developed grade 4 thrombocytopenia with PPX in combination with TMZ. Among the 22 evaluable patients, the overall response rate was 45% (10 of 22) with 27% (6 of 22) of patients achieving a complete response. With a median follow up of 10.2 months, 76% of patients remained free from disease progression or death (so called progression free survival or PFS) at 6 months.
"These results are quite provocative when considering that standard of care with TMZ and RT results in a 6 month PFS of 54%," said Jack Singer, M.D. Chief Medical Officer at CTI. "Given the high rate of response and durable PFS observed in this trial and the role of MGMT in conferring resistance to TMZ in more than half of GBM patients treated with the standard of care regimen (TMZ+RT) it is important to investigate whether PPX is able to bypass MGMT resistance as this could identify a genomically targeted population of patients with GBM for which PPX could provide meaningful durable responses and a potential additional accelerated route to approval."
Epigenetic silencing of MGMT confers sensitivity of GBM tumors to alkylating agents like TMZ. Unfortunately almost 55% of GBM tumors express MGMT, an enzyme that removes alkylating agents from DNA, thus preventing their DNA damaging effect. In an upcoming trial, The Brown University Oncology Group and Cell Therapeutics are planning to test PPX with radiation in the subset of patients with GBM and MGMT positive (non-silenced MGMT expression). This subset of patients, comprising 55% of patients with GBM, are resistant to standard treatment with temozolomide. In contrast, PPX is not expected to be effected by MGMT expression. Therefore, the combination of PPX and RT may be more effective than standard TMZ/RT in patients with MGMT positive GBM.
Date: December 14, 2010
Source: Cell Therapeutics, Inc. 

Results of Bleeding Disorder Trial Released

Results of Bleeding Disorder Trial Released
Drug Discovery & Development - December 15, 2010


Results were presented from mentor, a phase 3 trial examining the efficacy and safety of a recombinant factor XIII (rFXIII) compound for the prevention of bleeds associated with congenital FXIII deficiency, a rare bleeding disorder with about 6001,000 diagnosed patients worldwide.
In the trial, 41 patients were treated for one year, with rFXIII administered as a preventative, once-monthly replacement therapy for congenital FXIII deficiency. FXIII-deficient patients with no previous history of FXIII treatment were used as a control. Currently, the only treatment available is derived from human blood plasma, which carries an inherent risk of infections.
The trial results demonstrated that treatment with monthly recombinant FXIII injections significantly decreased the number of bleeding episodes requiring treatment compared to the historic control group. Over the course of the treatment period, a total of five bleeding episodes were observed in four patients. All five events were associated with trauma, and were not related to low FXIII activity levels in patients. Additionally, no thromboembolic events or fatal adverse events were reported.
"These data show the potential for rFXIII to become a safe and effective treatment option for patients who would otherwise use treatments at risk for contamination," said Prof Aida Inbal of the Hemostasis Unit and Hematology Clinic in the Institute of Hematology at Rabin Medical Center in Tel Aviv, Israel. "We think this is an extremely important milestone in the development of a treatment that is not sourced from human plasma for patients suffering from congenital FXIII deficiency."
Novo Nordisk plans to file for US Food and Drug Administration approval of the rFXIII in the first half of 2011.
Date: December 14, 2010
Source: Novo Nordisk A/S

Teva Announces Phase 3 Laquinimod Results

Teva Announces Phase 3 Laquinimod Results
Drug Discovery & Development - December 15, 2010


Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. and Active Biotech announced initial results from the two-year Phase 3 ALLEGRO study, which demonstrated that relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (MS) patients treated with 0.6 mg daily oral laquinimod experienced a statistically significant reduction in annualized relapse rate compared to placebo. Additional clinical endpoints, including significant reduction in disability progression, as measured by Expanded Disability Severity Scale (EDSS), were also achieved.
Laquinimod was safe and well-tolerated. The overall frequencies of adverse events were comparable to those observed in the placebo group. No deaths were reported in laquinimod-treated patients. Overall incidence of infections was similar between the two arms of the trial.
"This pivotal study met its primary endpoint while maintaining a very good safety profile," says Principal Investigator, Professor Giancarlo Comi, Director of the Department of Neurology and Institute of Experimental Neurology at the University Vite Salute, San Raffaele, Italy. "Laquinimod demonstrated a significant reduction in the progression of disability which may be explained by its unique mechanism of action that includes neuroprotective properties. Laquinimod may therefore be a promising therapeutic option for the MS community."
"We are very pleased to have achieved this major milestone in the development of oral laquinimod, a novel therapy that can potentially improve the lives of many MS patients in a safe way," said Shlomo Yanai, Teva's President and Chief Executive Officer.
Additional analyses of the ALLEGRO study data are ongoing, and detailed results will be submitted for presentation at a leading scientific conference during the first half of 2011.
Laquinimod received Fast Track designation from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in February 2009. The second phase 3 study, BRAVO is still ongoing with results anticipated in the third quarter of 2011. Regulatory submissions in the U.S. and the EU will then follow.
In addition to the ongoing MS clinical studies, laquinimod is currently in Phase II development for Crohn’s disease and Lupus, and is being studied in other autoimmune diseases.
Following the successful study results, Teva filed a patent application covering the use of laquinimod in slowing the progression of disability in MS patients.
Laquinimod is a novel once-daily, oral immunomodulatory compound being developed as a disease-modifying treatment for MS. The global Phase III clinical development program evaluating oral laquinimod in MS consists of two pivotal studies, ALLEGRO and BRAVO:
•The first clinical study, ALLEGRO, was a two-year multi-national, multi-center randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled study designed to evaluate the efficacy, safety and tolerability of laquinimod in MS patients. The study was conducted at 139 sites in 24 countries and enrolled 1,106 MS patients. Patients were randomized to receive a once-daily oral dose of 0.6 mg laquinimod or matching placebo. The primary outcome measure was the number of confirmed relapses; secondary measures included confirmed disability progression and changes in MRI active lesions,. Patients who completed the ALLEGRO study are offered to join an open-label extension phase, in which they will be treated with laquinimod 0.6mg daily until the drug is commercially available.
•The second clinical study, BRAVO, is a two-year, multi-national, multi-center, randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled study designed to compare the safety, efficacy and tolerability of a once-daily oral dose of 0.6 mg laquinimod over placebo and to perform a comparative risk-benefit assessment between laquinimod and interferon beta-1a. Enrollment of 1,332 patients at 154 sites in the U.S, Europe, Israel and South Africa was completed in June 2009. BRAVO study results are expected in the third quarter of 2011.
In addition to the ongoing MS clinical studies, laquinimod is currently in Phase 2 development for Crohn’s disease and Lupus, and is being studied in other autoimmune diseases.
Date: December 14, 2010
Source: Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd.

Zoledronic Acid Results Mixed for Advanced Breast Cancer

Zoledronic Acid Results Mixed for Advanced Breast Cancer
Drug Discovery & Development - December 15, 2010


Zoledronic acid did not improve disease free survival among women with stage 2/3 breast cancer according to results of the Adjuvant Treatment with Zoledronic Acid in Stage 2/3 Breast Cancer (AZURE) trial, which was presented at the 33rd Annual CTRC-AACR San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

“In the larger population, we did not see a difference,” said Robert Coleman, M.D., professor of medical oncology at the University of Sheffield in England.

However, among 1101 patients who were five years post-menopause, about 30 percent of the overall group, there was a 29 percent improvement in overall survival. Coleman stressed that this was a secondary outcome, so it could not be considered conclusive, but it did present the largest unanswered question.

“To see a survival advantage like this is quite remarkable, and the difference in outcome between this group and the younger population is unlikely to be a chance finding. We will clearly want to investigate further in this population,” he said.

The AZURE trial included 3,360 patients with stage II/III breast cancer from 174 centers. Coleman and colleagues randomly assigned the patients to standard therapy or to standard therapy plus zoledronic acid. The primary outcome was disease free survival.

The researchers found no difference in disease free survival in the overall population.

“This will likely dissuade clinicians from giving adjuvant bisphosphonates on a routine basis to younger women taking adjuvant chemotherapy because, although the drug is generally well tolerated, there is a small risk of osteonecrosis of the jaw,” said Coleman.

The researchers identified 17 (1.1%) confirmed cases of osteonecrosis of the jaw over the duration of the study period.

These results do not impact on the current useage of zoledronic acid for the treatment of metastatic bone disease across a broad range of cancers.
Date: December 14, 2010
Source: American Association for Cancer Research 

ISTA Begins Phase 2 Allergy Trial

ISTA Begins Phase 2 Allergy Trial
Drug Discovery & Development - December 15, 2010


ISTA Pharmaceuticals, Inc. announced it has initiated a Phase 2 clinical study of bepotastine besilate nasal spray for the treatment of symptoms associated with seasonal allergic rhinitis, the inflammation of the nasal passages caused by allergies. The randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group environmental study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of bepotastine besilate, dosed twice daily, in patients presenting with allergic rhinitis caused by one of the most potent seasonal allergy triggers, Mountain Cedar pollen.
ISTA expects to enroll approximately 600 patients in Texas who will be treated with either bepotastine besilate nasal spray or placebo for two weeks. Patients will grade both individual nasal and ocular symptoms on a daily basis.
"This nasal spray drug candidate represents an expansion of our focus in prescription allergy treatments, which currently includes BEPREVE® (bepotastine besilate ophthalmic solution) 1.5% for the treatment of ocular itching associated with allergic conjunctivitis,"  commented Vicente Anido, Jr., Ph.D., President and Chief Executive Officer of ISTA. "The results from our Phase 1/2 clinical study of bepotastine besilate nasal spray, announced in October 2010, showed a robust patient response to the nasal spray without serious side effects.  We expect to have preliminary data from this Phase 2 Mountain Cedar pollen study during the first half of 2011."
ISTA submitted the Investigational New Drug (IND) Application to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for bepotastine besilate nasal spray in November 2010.
Date: December 14, 2010
Source: ISTA Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 

FDA Revises Dosing Recommendations for PREZISTA

FDA Revises Dosing Recommendations for PREZISTA
Drug Discovery & Development - December 15, 2010


Tibotec Therapeutics, a division of Centocor Ortho Biotech Products, L.P., announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a revision to the dosing recommendation to include once-daily dosing of PREZISTA (darunavir) tablets in combination with ritonavir for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) in treatment-experienced adult patients with no darunavir resistance-associated mutations (DRV RAMs).
The revised dosing recommendation extends the same dosing already approved for treatment-naïve patients – PREZISTA, co-administered with ritonavir in combination with other antiretroviral agents and with food, once-daily (800/100 mg) – to treatment-experienced patients with no DRV RAMs. The previously approved dosing recommendation for PREZISTA/ritonavir in treatment-experienced patients (patients who have taken HIV medications in the past) was PREZISTA/ritonavir 600/100 mg twice daily.
For antiretroviral treatment-experienced patients genotypic testing is recommended. However, when genotypic testing is not feasible, PREZISTA/ritonavir 600/100 mg twice daily dosing is recommended.
The approval of this revision is based on 48-week data from the ODIN (Once-daily Darunavir In treatment-experieNced patients) study. ODIN evaluated the efficacy and safety of PREZISTA/ritonavir once daily vs. PREZISTA/ritonavir twice daily for the treatment of HIV-1 in treatment-experienced adult patients with no DRV RAMs (i.e., V11I, V32I, L33F, I47V, I50V, I54M, I54L, T74P, L76V, I84V, or L89V).
“With this once-daily dosing recommendation, boosted PREZISTA is now a viable option for more treatment-experienced patients,” said Glenn Mattes, president, Tibotec Therapeutics. “This approval reflects Tibotec’s ongoing commitment to optimizing dosing strategies for HIV patients.”
Data from the Phase 3b ODIN study were presented earlier this year at CROI 2010, the 17th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, in San Francisco. The study achieved its primary objective of demonstrating non-inferiority of PREZISTA/ritonavir once daily compared with twice daily.
Date: December 14, 2010
Source: Tibotec Therapeutics 

Zometa Reduces Bone Loss in Oral Cancer

Zometa Reduces Bone Loss in Oral Cancer
Drug Discovery & Development - December 14, 2010


A drug currently approved for osteoporosis treatment has been shown to reduce bone loss in a study of mice with oral cancer, suggesting it could serve as an important supplemental therapy in patients with head and neck cancers that erode bone.
In this Ohio State University study, the drug treatment also was associated with smaller tumors – an unexpected result.
The drug, zoledronic acid, is known by the brand name Zometa. It is designed to inhibit bone resorption, the breaking down of bone caused by the release of a specific kind of cell.
Oral squamous cell carcinoma accounts for about 90 percent of all tumors in the mouth. The five-year survival rate for this form of cancer is 61 percent for all stages combined, according to the National Cancer Institute.
When these tumors form in the gums, their growth in the limited space of the mouth leads to bone loss in the jaw. In turn, bone erosion stimulates the cancer to grow. Scientists call this phenomenon, driven in part by the release of cancer stimulatory compounds from bone, a vicious cycle that occurs in this and other forms of cancer. So even though bone loss itself is not life-threatening, loss of bone means the tumor is continuing to grow.
"The goal is to stop the vicious cycle," said Thomas Rosol, professor of veterinary biosciences at Ohio State and senior author of the study. "Chemotherapy, radiation and surgery are all used to treat head and neck cancers. Zoledronic acid is a very safe drug and all it does is block bone resorption, so patients could receive all of the standard treatments, and this drug could be added as an additional benefit. That's the overall concept."
Further animal and human studies would be required to determine the proper dose and assure the drug's safety and effectiveness, he said.
The research is published in a recent issue of the journal Cancer Research.
The researchers injected mice with oral squamous cell carcinoma cells from cats to create a disease model for the study. They assigned mice to one of four groups: animals with and without tumors that received a placebo treatment, and mice with and without tumors that received a zoledronic acid treatment.
Animals treated with the drug retained twice as much total bone as did mice with cancer that were untreated. The bone that was present after treatment was a combination of reduced loss of pre-existing bone and an increase in new bone formation, said Rosol, also an investigator in Ohio State's Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Powerful images of the animals' skulls revealed that the bone loss was so severe in some untreated animals with cancer that their tooth roots were exposed. In comparison, animals with cancer that received the drug retained enough bone to keep the tooth roots covered with bone. Overall, on average, mice with cancer that received the drug treatment retained enough bone to match the amount of total bone in mice without tumors.
"When there is bone loss, there is formation of new bone to try to compensate for the loss," Rosol said. "The new bone is not perfect, but importantly, drug treatment prevented loss of both pre-existing normal bone and the new bone that formed."
The retention of bone was attributed at least in part to the drug's ability to reduce the number of activated osteoclasts by 52 percent at sites where the tumor and bone met. Osteoclasts are the cells that are responsible for bone resorption.
The cancer cells that were injected into the mice had been altered to contain a protein that creates light so the scientists could track development of the tumors. At day 28, the tumors treated with zoledronic acid were, on average, at least 14 percent smaller than were tumors that were left untreated.
"With less bone resorption, there might be less stimulation of the tumor," Rosol said. "So if you slow down bone loss, it's not as suitable an environment for the cancer to progress. We were not trying to cure the cancer, but what we're showing is that even with no other therapy than zoledronic acid, the disease is better."
Rosol also noted that in the course of this research, an Ohio State graduate student developed the first mouse model of oral squamous cell carcinoma that leads to bone loss. Chelsea Martin, lead author of the study and a doctoral student in veterinary biosciences at the time, determined which kinds of cancer cells to use and where to inject them to produce the same cancer development in mice that is experienced by human patients.
"This new model mimics the disease very well," Rosol said.
It turns out that oral squamous cell carcinoma is also a common disease in cats. Knowing this, Martin, now a postdoctoral researcher in molecular and cellular biochemistry at Ohio State, produced the animal disease model by injecting oral cancer cells from a cat into the gums above the front teeth of mice whose immune systems were suppressed.
Rosol and colleagues plan to continue the research by testing the effects of zoledronic acid when it is combined with anticancer drugs in animals with head and neck cancer.
Date: December 13, 2010
Source: Ohio State University 

New Way to Produce ZFNs Found

New Way to Produce ZFNs Found
Drug Discovery & Development - December 13, 2010


A team led by Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) researchers has developed a faster way to engineer synthetic enzymes that target specific DNA sequences for inactivation, repair or alteration. The report from the MGH Molecular Pathology Unit, being published online in Nature Methods, describes a highly effective but less labor-intensive way to generate powerful tools called zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs).
"With our approach, called context-dependent assembly, any scientist can use either standard molecular biology techniques or commercial DNA synthesis to design ZFNs for their target gene of interest," says J. Keith Joung, MD, PhD, associate chief for Research in MGH Pathology, the study's senior author. "ZFNs are broadly applicable, powerful tools for manipulating the genomes of cells from various organisms – including humans – and may provide a way to efficiently correct gene mutations responsible for human disease, avoiding problems resulting from the imprecise nature of current gene therapy approaches using viral vectors."
Most human transcription factors that control whether a genetic signal is translated into a protein bind to specific DNA sequences using peptides called zinc fingers. Zinc-finger nucleases are synthetic "designer" proteins combining a zinc-finger domain, engineered to bind a particular DNA sequence, with an enzyme that breaks both DNA strands at the targeted site. While ZFNs have great potential, creating the customized proteins has been challenging.
In the simplest approach, called modular assembly, individual peptides are linked together like beads on a string to create a multi-finger protein theoretically able to recognize long DNA segments. Joung and others have shown that, in practice, modular assembly has a very low success rate for creating multi-finger proteins. This high failure rate is most likely due to "context-dependent" effects that individual zinc fingers can have on the DNA-binding activities of their neighboring fingers. Assembling peptides that don't work well together would be like trying to put together jigsaw puzzle pieces that don't fit.
In 2008, Joung and colleagues at the University of Minnesota and other institutions, members of the Zinc Finger Consortium, reported developing a method called OPEN (Oligomerized Pool ENgineering), which takes these context-dependent effects into account. But although OPEN works well, it can be labor intensive and extremely time consuming – requiring up to a year for a lab to establish the technology and two months of work to generate desired ZFNs. To address these limitations, the MGH research team has assembled an extensive archive of zinc fingers known to work well when positioned together – in essence puzzle pieces that already have been put together. Using this context-dependent method, the investigators were able to assemble dozens of ZFNs in as little as four days.
"With this archive in hand, any researcher can easily generate their own ZFNs in less than a week, and no special expertise is needed," Joung explains. "In addition to being much faster, context-dependent assembly can generate large numbers of ZFNs simultaneously, which is hard to do with OPEN because it is more labor intensive." As was the case with OPEN, the Joung lab and the Zinc Finger Consortium (http://www.zincfingers.org) will make the software and reagents required to practice context-dependent assembly available to all academic laboratories.
"One of the holy grails of genetics is the ability to make targeted changes to individual genes," says Laurie Tompkins, PhD, who over sees genetics grants at the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, one of the National Institutes of Health and a major supporter of this study. "Dr. Joung and his colleagues have developed an extraordinarily simple, efficient strategy for using zinc finger technology to swap out altered versions of genes for normal ones – or vice versa – providing basic scientists and clinicians alike with a broadly applicable research tool."
Adds Joung, an associate professor of Pathology at Harvard Medical School, "At this point, I believe that context-dependent assembly will have the biggest impact on researchers using ZFNs to genetically manipulate model organisms, possibly even models developed from pluripotent stem cells. Other big impacts should be enabling researchers to create knockout mutations in a large series of genes involved in a common pathway or related to a specific disease and to use ZFNs to create comprehensive collections of mutants for every gene in an organism." Joung is also a member of the MGH Center for Computational and Integrative Biology and Center for Cancer Research.
Date: December 12, 2010
Source: Massachusetts General Hospital

Tolerx Begins Phase 1 Antibody Trial

Tolerx Begins Phase 1 Antibody Trial
Drug Discovery & Development - December 14, 2010

Tolerx, Inc., a biopharmaceutical company developing novel therapies to treat autoimmune diseases and cancer by modulating T cell activity, announced that it has initiated a Phase 1 clinical trial to assess the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic, and pharmacodynamic profiles of TRX518, a monoclonal antibody designed to enhance the immune system by enabling T cells to more effectively attack cancer cells.
The Phase 1 trial will evaluate ascending single doses of TRX518 in patients with malignant melanoma. The clinical trial will be conducted by leading cancer researchers at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and is supported by research funding to Tolerx from the Cancer Research Institute and clinical trials management expertise from the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research Ltd., through its Cancer Vaccine Acceleration Fund (CVAF).
“We are very enthusiastic about leading the clinical study of TRX518 and evaluating this innovative immunotherapy, which offers a new approach to help cancer patients,” said Jedd Wolchok, MD, PhD, director of immunotherapy clinical trials at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.  “In collaboration with Tolerx and the leadership team at the CVAF, we have assisted with the unique aspects of immunotherapy trials in cancer, including patient enrollment criteria, dosing strategy, trial endpoints, and other considerations to ensure the highest standards and quality results for the TRX518 Phase 1 study.”
This open label, non-randomized, ascending dose design will assess the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of single ascending intravenous doses of TRX518 in up to 40 patients with advanced stage III and IV malignant melanoma.  The goal is to determine the maximum tolerated dose of TRX518 as patients are assessed over the 18-week core study period.  In future clinical programs, Tolerx plans to evaluate TRX518 for the treatment of other cancers, building on the broad potential of GITR as a fundamental mechanism involved in cancer as well as preclinical proof of concept studies of TRX518 in multiple models of established and metastatic cancer.
“Starting this first-in-human study with TRX518 in an oncology indication is an important milestone for Tolerx. TRX518 has a novel mechanism of action and has the potential to enhance an anti-tumor immune response, regardless of tumor type, and this has tremendous potential for a broad variety of malignancies,” said Louis Vaickus, MD, Chief Medical Officer at Tolerx.  “TRX518 works through GITR (glucocorticoid-induced tumor necrosis factor receptor), a molecule that has been recognized by the National Cancer Institute and other experts as one of the most promising targets in cancer immunotherapy.”
Date: December 14, 2010
Source: Tolerx, Inc.