| CURE
Member News Digest
454 Life Sciences
(Branford) announced that, using 454 sequencing technology,
researchers at Columbia University and Victorian Infectious
Disease Laboratory have discovered a new virus responsible
for the deaths of three organ transplant recipients. Earlier
the company announced new products and software for its
ultra-high throughput Genome Sequencer FLX System.
Achillion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (New Haven) announced
the appointment of Dr. Elizabeth A. Olek as vice president
and chief medical officer. Dr. Olek joins Achillion as a
member of the executive management team and will lead the
clinical development of Achillion's product development
candidates. Dr. Olek joins Achillion from Novartis
Pharmaceuticals Corporation.
Alexion Pharmaceuticals (Cheshire) and The
Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation announced that
Alexion has agreed to acquire from OMRF all rights to
certain patents related to complement-inhibition technology.
The patents cover inventions made by OMRF in the 1980s
relating to the treatment of complement system mediated
disorders, to which Alexion has had limited rights as a
licensee since the inception of the company. In the 1990s,
Alexion began programs to create and develop monoclonal
antibodies capable of blocking the body's complement system.
One result of these Alexion programs was the development of
Soliris®, which was approved for marketing by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration and by the European Commission
during 2007. Soliris® (eculizumab) is a complement
inhibitor product developed and marketed by Alexion for the
treatment of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, a rare,
debilitating and life-threatening disease.
Commenting on the company's 2007 results, Leonard Bell,
M.D., CEO, said: “Alexion's regulatory and commercial
success in 2007 is a direct result of breakthrough science,
compelling clinical data and a steadfast commitment to
patients. During 2007, Alexion became a global commercial
organization and started to fulfill its mission of improving
the lives of people with serious and life-threatening
disease. Physicians are developing a new sense of urgency in
detecting and treating patients with PNH as early as
possible. We greatly appreciate the confidence and support
we have received from physicians, employees, and
shareholders since Alexion was founded.”
Applied Spine Technologies (New Haven)
announced the appointment of Michael J. Giordano, M.D.,
M.B.A. as chief medical officer. He will oversee
an ongoing, randomized, controlled, national clinical study comparing
the company's
Stabilimax NZ
® device to traditional fusion surgery.
Bayer HealthCare (Leverkusen, Germany/West Haven)
announced that its partner, ZymoGenetics Inc., received FDA
approval of RECOTHROM™ for use as a topical hemostatic
product. Bayer acquired the product rights for all markets
outside the US in 2007 and will provide US sales support for
a three-year period as part of a co-promotion agreement.
Boehringer Ingelheim
(Ingelheim, Germany/Danbury) announced completion of
the enrollment phase of its RE-LY™ study, which is
comparing two blinded doses of oral dabigatran etexilate
with the current standard therapy, warfarin (target INR
2.0-3.0) in patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation
who are at moderate to high risk of stroke. Currently, over
10,000 patients have been treated for at least 6 months with
final study results expected to be reported in early 2009.
Bristol-Myers Squibb
Company (New York/Wallingford) has named Togo D. West,
Jr., to its board of directors, where he will will serve as
a member of the compensation and management development
committee and the committee on directors and corporate
governance. West, 65, is currently chairman of TLI
Leadership Group and of Noblis, Inc. He has been U.S.
Secretary of the Army and U.S. Secretary of Veterans
Affairs.
Carigent Therapeutics
(New Haven) announced that the National Science Foundation
has awarded the company a six-month, $97,000 Phase I Small
Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant to engineer
long-circulating nanoparticles that target delivery and
enable controlled release of paclitaxel to ovarian cancer
tumors. Paclitaxel, a widely used chemotherapy drug sold
under various brand names, including Taxol®, is a potent
anticancer natural product used to treat patients with
leukemia, lymphoma, and a number of solid-tumor malignancies
including ovarian cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer, and
brain cancer.
Cognate BioServices
(Baltimore/New Haven) has taken 7,550 square feet of
laboratory and office space at the Long Wharf Maritime
Center in New Haven. Established in 2002 and founded by
Toucan Capital, Cognate is an international research and
development company with an established track record of of
successfully developing and providing a broad range of
cell-based products and services for research, drug
discovery, and clinical applications. Richard Gold of O,R&L
represented the company in the lease negotiations.
CuraGen Corporation
(Branford) announced the appointment of Sean Cassidy as vice
president and CFO. David W. Wurzer is stepping down to
pursue other opportunities. Previously Cassidy served as
controller of 454 Life Sciences Corporation.
Danbury Hospital
(Danbury) has announed the appointment of Jessica L. Dodge,
M.D., to the Department of Laboratory Medicine. Board
certified in Anatomic and Clinical Pathology, Dr. Dodge
earned her medical degree from the Medical College of
Pennsylvania, and was an intern at the Johns Hopkins
Hospital in Baltimore, MD. She also completed a residency
and Surgical Pathology Fellowship at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
She was previously employed at the Cayuga Medical Center at
Ithaca (NY) and St. Vincent Hospital at Worcester Medical
Center in Massachusetts.
GlaxoSmithKline
(London/Research Triangle Park, NC) and XenoPort, Inc.
announced positive top-line results from a
placebo-controlled Phase 3 clinical trial designed to
evaluate the potential of XP13512 (GSK1838262) to maintain
efficacy over the course of nine months in patients with
moderate-to-severe primary Restless Legs Syndrome. “The
results of this study strengthen our belief that XP13512 has
potential as an effective and well tolerated treatment for
primary RLS,” said Ronald W. Barrett, Ph.D., chief
executive officer of XenoPort.
The newest satellite
facility of Hartford Hospital (Hartford) is the
Helen & Harry Gray Cancer Center in Avon. The new
center, on Fisher Drive just a short distance from the
hospital's Wellness Center on Rte. 10, is slated to open in
July, 2008.
HistoRx (New Haven) named
Rana K. Gupta CEO. Gupta had been serving as interim CEO
since August 2006. During that time, the company advanced
its proprietary AQUA® tissue biomarker analysis technology
platform, increased its revenue stream to fund product
development, and completed a $6 million Series B equity
financing round.
Ipsogen
(Marseille, France/New Haven) has entered into a pilot
agreement with AstraZeneca to evaluate molecular services
and products in cancer research. Ipsogen will provide
AstraZeneca with JAK2-based products for initial evaluation
and will conduct quantitative analysis in its Marseille
laboratories on samples provided by AstraZeneca. The study
will help determine the viability of a test which could
potentially be utilized by AstraZeneca in future clinical
trials. Ipsogen is the exclusive worldwide licensee of the
intellectual property on the JAK2 V617F mutation.
The company also
announced the
a license agreement with Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB),
Belgium for the worldwide and exclusive rights on the
Genomic Grade™,
a genomic index invented by Pr. Christos Sotiriou & Pr.
Martine Piccart, from the Bordet Institute, Brussels and Dr.
Mauro Delorenzi from the Swiss Institute for Cancer Research
(ISREC), Lausanne, two leading European cancer research
institutes.
Reporting on 2007 results, William C. Weldon, chairman and
CEO of Johnson & Johnson (New Brunswick, NJ),
said, “Despite challenges in certain markets, our broad
base of businesses allowed us to achieve solid results,
building on our foundation of long-term profitable growth.
It was a year of significant progress in our pipeline; the
successful integration of Pfizer Consumer Healthcare; and
the creation of new organizational structures focused on
future growth.”
Commenting on 3Q
results, Alfred Mann, chairman and CEO of MannKind
Corporation (Valencia, CA/Danbury), said, “While
Exubera [inhalable insulin] was withdrawn from the
marketplace, our Technosphere Insulin is very different and
continues to be well received by patients and physicians in
our clinical trials. Our Phase III program is on track and
our readiness for commercial operations is proceeding
according to schedule. As data becomes available in 2008, we
will be able to share more of this progress with our
investors. In the meantime, the recently announced positive
Phase I data for our Technosphere/GLP-1 product were
encouraging. More than ever, there is a need for improved
and innovative diabetes therapies. We at MannKind remain
committed to bringing such therapies to the enormous number
of diabetes patients who suffer from this disease.”
NanoViricides, Inc.
(West Haven) reported that they are on course with the
development of nanoviricides™ drug candidates against
highly pathogenic avian influenzas (HPAI) including H5N1
bird flu, and common influenza. “We are now ready to begin
animal studies on H5N1 at a renowned federal agency,” said
Dr. Eugene Seymour, MD, MPH, CEO of the Company. Earlier,
the Company had delayed these studies in search of suitable
facilities. The work is expected to begin once the contracts
are finalized.
Neurogen Corporation
(Branford) announced Feb 4 that its president, Stephen
R. Davis, has been appointed chief executive officer.
William Koster has retired but remains on the company's
board. The company announced Feb 6 that it is reducing its
workforce as part of a restructuring intending to focus its
resources on its advancing clinical assets.
Earlier, the company
announced that it has completed the follow-up component of a
Phase I multiple ascending dose (MAD) study with NGD-4715,
an MCH-1 receptor antagonist being investigated for the
treatment of obesity. Results suggest that the effect of
MCH-1 receptor antagonism on caloric regulation and sleep
architecture requires further study in humans. Based on the
results, Neurogen has determined that it will not advance
the compound into Phase II testing at this time, but will
consider out-licensing its MCH program for potential
development with a partner.
Commenting on 2007 results, Jeff Kindler, chairman and CEO
of Pfizer Inc. (New York, NY/Groton/New London),
said: “In 2007, we delivered solid performance, and made
structural and operational changes to enhance the future
performance of our company. With strong product performance,
cost reductions, improved productivity and the benefits of
foreign exchange, we achieved both revenue and adjusted
diluted EPS growth ... . Our new products —
Lyrica, Chantix, and Sutent — are performing
well. We are continuing to strengthen our senior leadership
team and enhance accountability. We are shifting investments
into high-priority therapeutic areas, revamping our R&D
operations and acquiring new compounds and technologies that
we believe are especially promising. These actions taken
together have made Pfizer a stronger company than it was a
year ago, and we look forward to continued progress in
2008.”
Pharmaceutical Research
and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) (Washington, DC)
has joined a nationwide workplace wellness effort in
becoming CEO Cancer Gold Standard™ accredited,
certifying their commitment to the health of their employees
and their families by meeting an exceptionally high standard
of cancer prevention, screening and health care. The CEO
Cancer Gold Standard™, calls for companies to
evaluate their benefits and culture and take extensive,
concrete actions in five key areas of health and wellness to
fight cancer in the workplace. To earn accreditation, a
company must establish programs to reduce cancer risk by
discouraging tobacco use; encouraging physical activity;
promoting a healthy diet; providing appropriate screening to
detect cancer at its earliest stages and providing access to
quality care, including cancer clinical trials.
Purdue Pharma L.P.
(Stamford) said it had achieved an important victory in its
patent infringement litigation relating to Purdue's patents
covering the pain medicine OxyContin® (oxycodone HCl
controlled-release) Tablets when the United States District
Court for the Southern District of New York rejected claims
that the patents in suit were unenforceable because of
alleged inequitable conduct by Purdue in obtaining them from
the United States Patent and Trademark Office. In an Opinion
and Order dated January 7, 2008, the Court stated, “[T]he
weight of the equities before this Court does not warrant
the extreme sanction of holding the patents in suit
unenforceable. ...[D]efendants have failed to show by clear
and convincing evidence that the Purdue committed
inequitable conduct before the PTO, and therefore the
patents-in-suit will not be held unenforceable on that
basis.”
RainDance Technologies
(Guilford) was selected as a World Economic Forum Technology
Pioneer and invited to participate in the World Economic
Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland, in January 2008.
Technology Pioneers are companies that have been identified
as developing and applying highly transformational and
innovative technologies in the areas of energy,
biotechnology and health, and information technology.
According to the Forum, to be selected as a Technology
Pioneer, a company must be involved in the development of
life-changing technology innovation and have the potential
for long-term impact on business and society. In addition,
it must demonstrate visionary leadership, show all the signs
of being a long-standing market leader — and
its technology must be proven.
Rib-X Pharmaceuticals,
Inc. (New Haven) announced the enrollment of the first
patients in two separate Phase II clinical trials. The
studies will evaluate the safety and efficacy of RX-1741 in
the treatment of Community-Acquired Pneumonia, and
separately in the outpatient treatment of Uncomplicated Skin
and Skin Structure Infections. RX-1741 is the Company’s
first antibiotic program developed using its proprietary
technology platform. RX-1741 is an oxazolidinone antibiotic
that exhibits activity against methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and other Gram-positive
organisms, and has demonstrated both greater spectrum and
potency of activity than the currently marketed product of
the same class. Rib-X believes that RX-1741, discovered
using proprietary knowledge of the three dimensional
structure of a key area of the ribosome, the 50S subunit,
will demonstrate a high level of effectiveness against
resistant microbes.
Vion Pharmaceuticals,
Inc. (New Haven) announced that the FDA has lifted the
clinical hold on the Phase III trial (Vion Study CLI-037) of
its lead anti-cancer agent, Cloretazine® (VNP40101M), in
combination with cytarabine in relapsed acute myelogenous
leukemia (AML). Alan Kessman, CEO, said, “We are pleased
with the FDA's decision ... and are now poised to move ahead
with clinical development.”
Webster Bank
(Waterbury) announced the appointment of Jeffrey A. Klaus as
regional president for its greater New Haven region. Klaus
has 25 years of experience in the Connecticut banking
industry.
Following is recent
news from The University of Connecticut (Storrs) and
the University of Connecticut Health Center
(Farmington).
Six proposals from
researchers in the sciences and engineering won a total of
$2 million of equipment funding in the recent Provost’s
Research Equipment Competition at UConn. more
A new automated clinical
laboratory is adding another level of patient protection at
the Health Center, as well as cost-savings and safety
benefits for staff. more
The second annual New
England Musculoskeletal Institute Research Day was held
recently at the UConn Health Center. The event is an
opportunity for scientists and clinicians to present their
latest research findings. more
Following is recent news
from Yale University and the Yale School of
Medicine (New Haven).
Bioengineers at Yale and
Cornell have created a modified chemotherapy that more
effectively reaches and remains at the site of brain tumors
— by adding a water-soluble polymer to the anti-cancer
drug, according to a report in the November-December issue
of Bioconjugate Chemistry. “This approach has the
potential to increase treatment distances to more than a
centimeter, which may be sufficient to prevent the
recurrence of human brain tumors,“ said Mark Saltzman,
Goizueta Foundation Professor of Chemical and Biomedical
Engineering at Yale and senior author on the paper.
Boosting an
exercise-related gene in the brain works as a powerful
anti-depressant in mice-a finding that could lead to a new
anti-depressant drug target, according to a Yale School of
Medicine report in Nature Medicine. “The VGF
exercise-related gene and target for drug development could
be even better than chemical antidepressants because it is
already present in the brain,” said Ronald Duman,
professor of psychiatry and senior author of the study.
An antibody used to treat
certain cancers and rheumatoid arthritis appears to greatly
delay type 1 diabetes in mice, Yale School of Medicine
researchers report in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.
“Our paper shows, for the first time, that after
successful B cell depletion, regulatory cells emerge that
can continue to suppress the inflammatory and autoimmune
response even after the B cells return,” said Li Wen,
senior research scientist in the division of endocrinology.
“Even more strikingly, we found that these regulatory
cells include both B and T cells.”
Yale School of Medicine
researchers have shown for the first time that it is
possible to suppress the development of epilepsy in
genetically predisposed animals — which could open
the door to treating epilepsy as a preventable disease.
“Current treatments for epilepsy may control seizures, but
they do nothing to alter the underlying disease,” said Hal
Blumenfeld, M.D., associate professor of neurology and lead
author of the study. “These findings are important because
they set the stage for prevention of epilepsy in genetically
susceptible people.”
A genetic mutation expands
lesions in the aorta and promotes coronary atherosclerosis,
more commonly known as hardening of the arteries, according
to a study by Yale School of Medicine in Cell Metabolism.
“Mice engineered without the Akt1 gene and fed a high
cholesterol diet had many more signs of aortic
atherosclerosis compared to their littermates,” said
William Sessa, senior author of the study, professor of
pharmacology, and director of Yale's vascular biology and
therapeutics program.
Yale School of Medicine
researchers have isolated a gene that helps protect newborns
from the most common respiratory cause of infant death in
the United States — respiratory distress syndrome.
“The finding is important because prematurity is not only
the most common respiratory cause of infant mortality in the
U.S., it also tends to be a more serious problem in inner
city neighborhoods,” said Richard Bucala, M.D., professor
of medicine and pathology, professor of epidemiology at Yale
School of Public Health, and senior author of the study.
Researchers at Yale School
of Medicine have found that a low concentration of vitamin E
in the blood is linked with physical decline in older
persons. Published in the January 23 issue of Journal of the
American Medical Association, the study included 698 people
age 65 or older who were randomly selected from the
population registry in two municipalities close to Florence,
Italy. The researchers, led by first author Benedetta
Bartali of Yale, collected blood samples to measure the
levels of micronutrients including folate, iron and vitamins
B6, B12, D and E.
The New Haven City Plan
Commission unanimously approved a site plan for a garage to
be used by the Smilow Cancer Center at Yale-New Haven
Hospital. Plans call for retail shops to surround the
garage. Besides the garage, a new medical lab on Park Street
accompanies development of the cancer center, which is
expected to open in 2009.
Research projects by two Yale School of Medicine
investigators — one studying global healthcare
disparities, the other, depression — have been
given a boost with five-year, $600,000 awards from the
Patrick and Catherine Weldon Donaghue Medical Research
Foundation for Health-Related Research. The Investigator
Awards to Jennifer Prah Ruger, assistant professor in the
Division of Global Health at Yale School of Public Health,
and Alexander Neumeister, M.D., director of the Molecular
Imaging Program in psychiatry, are intended to support
particularly promising and highly talented medical
researchers holding academic appointments at Connecticut
institutions.
Tim Corson, a Yale
postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Molecular, Cellular
& Developmental Biology, received two top fellowship
honors from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
in Ottawa on November 20 for his proposal of a research
project to target and destroy a protein commonly active in
cancer. Corson received the Jean-François St-Denis
Fellowship in Cancer Research for the top-ranked proposal in
the field of cancer research in the 2006-2007 competition,
and a Bisby Fellowship for submitting the overall top-ranked
post-Ph.D. proposal in February 2007 competitions.
Even though current
guidelines advocate colorectal cancer screenings for those
with severe illnesses, they may bring little benefit and may
actually pose harm, according to a recent study by Yale
School of Medicine researchers published in the Archives of
Internal Medicine. First author R. Scott Braithwaite, M.D.,
and his colleagues developed a new method of evaluating
medical screening tests like colonoscopy, called the
“payoff time,” which is the minimum amount of time it
takes for the benefits from a test to exceed its harms
(i.e., its complications and side effects).
The largest, most
comprehensive study of young women with heart attacks —
VIRGO (Variation in Recovery: Role of Gender on Outcomes in
Young AMI patients) — was recently launched at Yale School
of Medicine with a $9.7 million National Institutes of
Health grant. “This is the first study to focus on this
high risk-and highly unstudied-group.” said Yale School of
Public Health Associate Professor Judith Lichtman,
co-principal investigator of the study. “There have been
no large, prospective studies of this population, even
though the death toll is comparable to that from breast
cancer.”
The adage “It's not what
you say but how you say it” — was confirmed by a
Yale study, which shows that playing up the benefits of
quitting smoking is more effective in getting people to quit
than emphasizing the problems associated with continuing to
smoke. The difference is substantial enough that
consideration should be given to rewriting the warning
labels on packs of cigarettes to emphasize the benefits of
quitting smoking rather than the risk of continuing, said
first author Benjamin Toll, assistant professor of
psychiatry at Yale School of Medicine.
Children learn by imitating
adults-so much so that they will rethink how an object works
if they observe an adult taking unnecessary steps when using
that object, according to a Yale study today in Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences. “Even when you
add time pressure, or warn the children not to do the
unnecessary actions, they seem unable to avoid reproducing
the adult's irrelevant actions,” said Derek Lyons,
doctoral candidate, developmental psychology, and first
author of the study. “They have already incorporated the
actions into their idea of how the object works.”
Black patients are
significantly less likely than their white counterparts to
receive therapy for various kinds of cancer, despite recent
efforts to close gaps in treatment, according to a study by
researchers at Yale School of Medicine published in the
January 7 online issue of the journal Cancer. Cary P. Gross,
M.D., associate professor of medicine at Yale School of
Medicine, and colleagues studied the Surveillance,
Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER)-Medicare database to
evaluate whether greater attention and investment in access
to care for all individuals have led to any reduction in
cancer treatment disparities.
For more member
news, see the December
2007 issue of CURE News |