Showing posts with label TMC649128. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TMC649128. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

TMC649128 enters Phase Ib Trial in Patients Chronically Infected with Genotype-1 Hepatitis C Virus

HUDDINGE, Sweden, Jun 22, 2011 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Regulatory News:
Medivir AB (sto:MVIRB)(omx:MVIR), the emerging research-based specialty pharmaceutical company focused on infectious diseases, today announces the start of a phase Ib clinical trial with TMC649128 intended for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection.

TMC649128 is a nucleoside NS5B polymerase inhibitor developed in collaboration with Tibotec Pharmaceuticals. TMC649128 has demonstrated an attractive pre-clinical profile and displays in vitro activity across multiple HCV genotypes and a high genetic barrier to resistance. A clinical phase Ia double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled single-ascending dose trial to assess the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics in healthy volunteers has now successfully been completed.

The TMC649128 phase Ib study that now is underway is a double-blind, randomized and placebo-controlled trial in genotype 1 HCV-infected patients to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and antiviral activity of multiple ascending doses of TMC649128 given as monotherapy and in combination with pegylated interferon and ribavirin.

It is anticipated that TMC649128 will be used in combination with other HCV direct acting antiviral agents, given its high genetic barrier to resistance and antiviral activity across multiple HCV genotypes.

"We are delighted to see TMC649128, our first HCV nucleoside inhibitor, advance into clinical phase Ib studies in HCV patients", stated Bertil Samuelsson, CSO of Medivir. "The start of this phase Ib trial underscores our commitment to develop new and innovative treatments for hepatitis C infected patients. We view nucleoside inhibitors, such as TMC649128, and protease inhibitors, such as TMC435, as cornerstone components of future direct acting antiviral combinations for HCV therapy."

About Hepatitis C

Hepatitis C is a blood-borne infectious disease of the liver and is a leading cause of chronic liver disease and liver transplants. The WHO estimates that nearly 180 million people worldwide, or approximately 3% of the world's population, are infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV). The CDC has reported that almost three million people in the United States are chronically infected with HCV.
About Medivir's Commitment to HCV
Medivir and Tibotec are also jointly developing the once daily protease inhibitor TMC435 for treatment of hepatitis C virus infections (HCV).

About Medivir
Medivir is an emerging research-based specialty pharmaceutical company focused on the development of high-value treatments for infectious diseases. Medivir has world class expertise in polymerase and protease drug targets and drug development. Medivir has a strong R&D portfolio and has recently launched its first product Xerese(TM)/Xerclear(R). Medivir's key pipeline asset, TMC435, a protease inhibitor, is in global phase 3 clinical development for Hepatitis C and is partnered with Tibotec Pharmaceuticals.
Xerese(TM)/Xerclear(R) is an innovative treatment for cold sores, which has been approved in both the US and Europe. It is partnered with GlaxoSmithKline to be sold OTC in Europe and Russia and with Meda AB in North America. Medivir has retained the Rx rights for Xerclear(R) in Sweden and Finland.
For more information about Medivir, please visit the Company's website: www.medivir.se .
This information was brought to you by Cision http://www.cisionwire.com
SOURCE: Medivir

Thursday, February 17, 2011

News; Hepatitis C Drug TMC649128


Medivir Kicks Off Phase 1a Trial of the Hepatitis C Polymerase Inhibitor TMC649128

Wed, 16 Feb 2011 01:37:23 EST Feb 16, 2011

Medivir AB, a research-based specialty pharmaceutical company focused on infectious diseases, announced the start of a phase 1a clinical trial with TMC649128 intended for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus infection. The Company said TMC649128 is a nucleoside NS5B polymerase inhibitor that has already demonstrated an attractive pre-clinical profile. It is anticipated that this profile would see TMC649128 be used in combination with HCV directly acting antiviral agents, given their high genetic barrier to resistance and antiviral activity across multiple HCV genotypes. In pre-clinical studies, TMC649128 displayed in vitro activity across multiple HCV genotypes and a high genetic barrier to resistance. The phase 1a trial is a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled single-ascending dose trial to assess the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics in healthy volunteers and will be conducted in Belgium.

TMC649128 is being developed in collaboration with Tibotec Pharmaceuticals. According to a release, Medivir entered a Research and Development agreement in the field of hepatitis C virus polymerase with Ortho Biotech Products LP, an affiliate of Tibotec in May 2008. The development of TMC649128 falls under this agreement and by entering clinical development, a milestone payment of Euro 7 million has been triggered for payment to Medivir. "We are extremely excited to see TMC649128, our first HCV nucleoside inhibitor, move into clinical development", stated Bertil Samuelsson, CSO of Medivir. "The start of this phase 1a trial underlines Medivir's commitment to the development of novel and innovative hepatitis C treatments. We view nucleoside inhibitors as cornerstone components of future HCV treatment paradigms in combination with directly acting antiviral agents and a TMC649128 component could set them apart from other HCV drug classes."

The Company noted that Hepatitis C is a blood-borne infectious disease of the liver and is a cause of chronic liver disease and liver transplants. The WHO estimates that nearly 180 million people worldwide, or approximately 3 percent of the world's population, are infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV). The CDC has reported that almost three million people in the United States are chronically infected with HCV. Medivir and Tibotec are also jointly developing the once daily protease inhibitor TMC435 for treatment of hepatitis C virus infections (HCV). Medivir is a research-based specialty pharmaceutical company focused on the development of high-value treatments for infectious diseases.
More information: http://www.medivir.se/

'
National News
at 14:55 on February 17, 2011, EST.

Harm reduction groups to intervene in court fight over safe-injection site
The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER - The operators of Vancouver's safe drug-injection site will have some allies in a Supreme Court of Canada case that will decide the future of the facility.
The high court has granted intervenor status in the case to the International Harm Reduction Association, the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network and CACTUS Montreal, which will all argue in favour of facility, called Insite.
The federal government is challenging a B.C. Appeal Court ruling that found Insite is a health facility and falls under provincial jurisdiction, not federal.
The site had been operating under an exemption from federal drug laws, but the Conservative government had indicated it wanted to end that exemption and see the supervised injection site closed.
HIV/AIDS Legal Network director Richard Elliott says Insite is an international success story but the federal government is ignoring scientific evidence and the need for harm reduction policies.
Rick Lines of the Harm Reduction Association says there's extensive evidence that safe-injection sites save lives by reducing the injection behaviour that can transmit HIV and hepatitis C.
Content Provided By Canadian Press.
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Lawmakers urge investigation into oversight of VA dental clinic
By Joanne Huist Smith, Staff Writer
Updated 8:45 AM Thursday, February 17, 2011 DAYTON — Three Dayton area congressmen are calling for an investigation into the lack of oversight that allowed a dentist at a Dayton VA Medical Center clinic to violate medical standards for nearly two decades, potentially exposing hundreds of veterans to blood-borne pathogens..
.
.From Journal of Viral Hepatitis
Optimal Combinations of Ultrasound-based and Serum Markers of Disease Severity in Patients with Chronic Hepatitis C

J. F. L. Cobbold; M. M. E. Crossey; P. Colman; R. D. Goldin; P. S. Murphy; N. Patel
Authors and Disclosures
Posted: 02/16/2011; J Viral Hepat. 2010;17(8):537-545. © 2010 Blackwell Publishing

Discussion Only/ Full Text
Enhanced Liver Fibrosis panel (ELF ), Hepatic-transit-time analysis (HTT)

Transient elastography (TE), Aspartate aminotransferase (AST) to platelet ratio index(APRI), TE, ELF and HTT. For the diagnosis of cirrhosis, ELF performed as well as TE, but better than APRI.

ELF performed as well as both TE and APRI for the diagnosis of moderate-to-severe fibrosis from mild disease. The diagnostic accuracy for HTT was substantially lower than that of the other markers. In addition, HTT did not contribute significantly to the marker combinations, despite a modest increase in accuracy. HTT was also the least reliable test, with an ICC of 0.8 (compared to reliability in excess of 90% for the other markers).

This study has combined markers on the basis of cost and practicality. As increasing numbers of biomarkers have been shown to predict liver disease severity, such considerations will help determine which markers enter clinical practice or are employed in clinical trials.
The use of a three-group ordinal regression analysis enabled the interactions between markers to be investigated in combinations. It should be noted that a single cheap test, the APRI score, correctly predicted fibrosis severity in 92% of those whose severity was correctly predicted by a two-test model, including either ELF or TE, and 88% of those correctly predicted by a three-test model, including both TE and ELF. Scrutiny of the multi-marker models allowed an assessment of the interplay between tests when predicting the histological stage.

When a component of the combination was significant, its removal from the model significantly altered the goodness-of-fit of that particular model and those tests were considered complementary. If there was no significant change on removal of a test, it was considered redundant. For example, both ELF and TE significantly enhanced a two-test model of fibrosis containing the APRI score, while neither ELF nor TE contributed significantly to the three-test model provided by the other two tests (Table 6).

This does not imply that either test is not a predictor of fibrosis, but that its inclusion in that model did not provide additional information to the other tests; that is, there was a degree of redundancy.

As this was a head-to-head analysis without missing data, systematic bias between tests was minimized. The tight exclusion criteria and well-matched patient groups minimized potentially confounding factors. The analysis approach enabled the contribution of each test to the accumulated combinations to be quantified.

In the context of the published literature, the diagnostic accuracy achieved for the tests using ROC curves for the diagnosis of cirrhosis from less severe fibrosis is comparable to that found by previous studies using TE and/or APRI, while the diagnostic accuracy for the separation of mild from more severe fibrosis exceeded 80% for the APRI score, ELF panel and TE, but only just exceeded 70% for HTT, which was also comparable to other studies.[23–26] Previous publications have proposed algorithms where agreement or concordance between tests of similar diagnostic accuracy lent confidence to the interpretation of a binary result and proposed avoidance of diagnostic liver biopsy.

Where results were discordant, biopsy was proposed.[23] This current study provides evidence on whether tests are complementary or redundant. This may enhance the building of optimal combinations of tests. If tests are complementary, agreement will reflect the disease state. If tests are redundant, agreement may simply reflect that the tests are measuring a similar parameter, which may or may not be closely related to the disease state or reference standard.

While this study aimed to quantify the contributions of each marker to models of disease severity, some features are qualitative. In particular, HTT may be performed at the time of abdominal ultrasound examination, which is a part of routine assessment of patients with chronic liver disease, reducing the additional costs. Examination of the dynamic enhancement of hepatic parenchyma increases the detection of hepatocellular carcinoma,[27] which is a major complication in patients with cirrhosis, but is also seen in pre-cirrhotic disease in patients with chronic hepatitis B virus infection. Such a technique may, therefore, be an appropriate addition to APRI in those without access to TE or ELF markers, and in cohorts of patients where imaging of the liver is required. However, the evidence from this study demonstrates its inferiority for the assessment of fibrosis compared to the other markers studied.

This study was limited by the use of liver biopsy with inherent sampling variability,[1,3] itself a surrogate marker of disease, as a reference standard. Sampling variability was minimized by exclusion of samples.

Biopsy criteria in many centres lead to the underrepresentation of patients with mild disease, where histology is the reference standard compared to the patient population as a whole. Moreover, a significant minority of patients with normal transaminase tests, who are less likely to undergo biopsy, are found to have a substantial degree of fibrosis.[28]

Patients with clinically overt or decompensated cirrhosis of known aetiology do not usually require biopsy for clinical purposes and hence the full spectrum of disease is unlikely to have been fully represented, leading to potential selection bias in the current study population, which may affect ROC curves and derivatives.[29] However, the ordinal regression model presented is robust to such effects, as strict cut-off values and assumptions about disease prevalence are not used.
The cohort examined in this study is large for a study examining nonserological techniques, yet small compared to a number of studies of TE and serum markers. As such, extrapolation of the results to create clinical algorithms was not considered appropriate.

TE and ELF were found to perform equally in this study. A larger study may have the power to detect a difference in the diagnostic performance of these tests if such a difference exists. While this study provides novel information about the relative diagnostic performance of four markers, singly and in combination in the context of cost and practicality, a larger scale cost-benefit analysis would allow further appraisal of these tests for widespread incorporation into clinical usage. Consideration should also be made of potential access to hardware, appropriately trained personnel or external laboratory services. Finally, for noninvasive techniques to replace liver biopsy, attempts to predict clinically important endpoints prospectively using marker combinations are warranted.

To conclude, this impartial head-to-head analysis of the diagnostic performance of two serum and two imaging-based markers of fibrosis shows that ELF and TE have a high diagnostic accuracy for the prediction of fibrosis and that HTT performs less well than the other tests. A combination of APRI with either ELF or TE effectively predicts fibrosis stage using a three-group model of fibrosis, but that, in combinations of three or more tests leads to redundancy of information. This study may provide a basis for future clinically based cost-benefit analyses to assess optimal combinations of markers.

Bulletin for Hep C Patients: Building on Dr. Oz's Advice
A recent, popular television show educated viewers on the importance of raising glutathione levels. Although the practical suggestions given were accurate, there is much more to know about this topic. Especially important for Hepatitis C patients, two supplements demonstrate unparalleled glutathione-boosting power. Read more.

FYI; Dr. Oz's yellow brick road: Oprah's favorite doctor promotes quackery
Aiding and abetting Oz is a rotating cast of colorful guests. For example, he gave air time to Dr. Joseph Mercola, a fan of krill oil for "support" of joint, liver and heart health. Unsurprisingly, Mercola sells the product on his Web site - where he also advanced the novel idea that cancer might be a fungus and, if so, should be responsive to baking soda. Mercola has been twice warned by the FDA about his questionable claims.

HIV

Public Release: 16-Feb-2011
Journal of Infectious Diseases

Trial suggests statin may affect markers associated with progression of HIV
A recent multicenter clinical trial of atorvastatin found that although the drug did not inhibit plasma HIV RNA levels, it did inhibit expression of cellular markers of immune activation and inflammation in patients with HIV infection. Available online, the findings are published in the Journal of Infectious Diseases.
Contact: John Heysjheys@idsociety.org703-299-0412
Infectious Diseases Society of America
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Non-invasive tests can predict which HIV-positive women have increased risk of liver disease
15 February 2011
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9% prevalence of hepatitis C co-infection among UK HIV patients
14 February 2011
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Liver Cancer

Apricus Biosciences and FDA Initiate PrevOnco(TM) SPA Phase III Clinical Protocol Discussion
SAN DIEGO, Feb. 17, 2011 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) --

Apricus Biosciences, Inc. ("Apricus Bio") (Nasdaq:APRI), announced today that it is currently in discussions with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration ("FDA") relating to the PrevOnco™ Special Protocol Assessment ("SPA") Phase III protocol submitted by the Company in December 2010.

In the first response received by Apricus Bio relating to this SPA, the FDA accepted some of the questions submitted by the Company and commented on the rest. The Company's Clinical Advisory Board, formed to focus on the clinical development of PrevOnco™, Apricus Bio's first oncology compound, will meet in late February to discuss the FDA response and comments, and the Company will prepare a response according to feedback from the Clinical Advisory Board. In addition, the Company may request a meeting with the FDA to accelerate the FDA's SPA Phase III protocol review process.

Dr. Bassam Damaj, President and Chief Executive Officer of Apricus Bio, noted, "We will continue to work diligently with the FDA and respond to their comments as expeditiously as possible."

PrevOnco™ is Apricus Bio's proprietary treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma (liver cancer). The Company announced in late November 2010 that it intended to file the protocol for a proposed Phase III clinical trial of PrevOnco™ with the FDA. Pursuant to the FDA's SPA program, the agency provides approval for the trial's design, clinical endpoints and statistical analysis. A company's SPA is not considered accepted until the FDA comments and agrees to all of the questions and protocol design submitted therein. Once the SPA is accepted, the PrevOnco™ Phase III study is expected to take about 12-24 months, depending on patient recruitment. If the trial shows positive results within the parameters agreed upon in the SPA, the data would then be expected to provide the basis for the filing of a New Drug Application for marketing approval of PrevOnco™ for the treatment of liver cancer in the U.S.
The FDA granted PrevOnco™ Orphan Drug status in August 2008.

The product incorporates lansoprazole, a commonly marketed anti-ulcer compound which has shown strong anti-cancer activity in mice bearing human liver tumors. Upon acceptance of the SPA, the Company expects that the Phase III study will enroll up to 218 patients who have advanced, unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma who no longer respond to Nexavar® (the currently marketed first-line anti-cancer treatment for patients with this type of liver cancer). The subjects will receive Nexavar® and doxorubicin (the widely used chemotherapy anti-cancer drug), plus either PrevOnco™ or a placebo. Nexavar® is marketed in the U.S. by Onyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals, Inc., with close to $1 billion in sales, and is approved in more than 90 countries for the treatment of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma.

For further information on Apricus Bio, visit http://www.apricusbio.com/ and for information on its subsidiaries please visit http://www.nexmedusa.com/ or http://www.bio-quant.com/

Off The Cuff

A Summary of Social Security Disability Benefits for Viral Hepatitis
If chronic Hepatitis B or C has rendered you incapable of performing any work, Social Security disability benefits may provide a safety net. Understanding the guidelines for disability will help those truly in need to better work their way through an intensive application process.

Read more.

From Nature;
It takes two to tango: FDA ponders a new regulatory dance
February 16, 2011
Two drugs taken together can sometimes be greater than the sum of their parts. And for certain diseases, including cancer, drug combinations are essential to achieve any therapeutic benefit. But the existing regulatory framework for testing and approving new drugs focuses primarily on the effectiveness and safety of individual experimental compounds. This means that it’s been nearly impossible to conduct early clinical trials on multiple new drugs at the same time.
All that might soon change. In December, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) released draft guidance outlining a path toward developing combinations of unapproved drugs. “We need to enable these innovative targeted therapies in a way that isn’t possible in traditional drug development,” Janet Woodcock, director of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER), told Nature Medicine.


“The places we think are most likely to have interest, at least initially, are oncology and infectious diseases,” says CDER deputy director for clinical science Robert Temple. That’s because pathogens such as tuberculosis and HIV quickly develop drug resistance when only single-agent therapies are used. Similarly, tumors often harbor multiple gene mutations that allow cancer to grow and that need to be targeted simultaneously.
Combination drug development at present usually involves phase 3 trials in which fixed doses of two drugs are tested both alone and in tandem against a placebo treatment. To get to that stage, however, experimental drugs usually need to be taken through earlier-stage trials in isolation, even if they have limited utility on their own. The new proposed guidelines would allow drug makers to forego monotherapy trials and conduct combined drug studies earlier in the development process, when there are compelling reasons and preclinical data to support such a move.
Continue reading "It takes two to tango: FDA ponders a new regulatory dance" »

Is The FDA Press Office Squelching The Media?
The workings of the media may not always be clear, but one long-standing practice - especially among medical journals - is to apply an embargo on information before publication. Lately, however, this has become controversial as a growing number of journals and institutions are adding various requirements, notably barring journalists from seeking expert comment prior to the moment an embargo is lifted.....

Superbugs in the Supermarket

Check Out The Video
Canadians are becoming increasingly resistant to antibiotics. As a result, people are getting sicker and are taking longer to get well. It is now not uncommon for people to be administered antibiotics through an IV because the usual drugs in pill form can't fight off their infections.
While we've all heard that over-prescription of antibiotics to people is one cause of the resistance, what many Canadians don't know is that another major cause is because the animals we eat are also given large amounts of antibiotics. And not just when they're sick: healthy animals can be fed antibiotics every day because it makes them grow bigger, faster.
In an important story about human health, and the food we eat, Marketplace tests 100 samples of chicken bought at major supermarkets from across the country.
In Superbugs in the Supermarket, we name popular brands, and also reveal surprising information about organic poultry that claims to be raised without antibiotics.

Louisiana Attorney General Sues Glaxo Over Avandia
Yet another state attorney general has filed a lawsuit charging GlaxoSmithKline with fraudulently marketing its controversial Avandia diabetes pill. This time, Louisiana Attorney General Buddy Caldwell has gone to court; a few months earlier, his counterpart in Utah did the same (back story). At issue is the allegation that the drugmaker knowingly marketed a pill that caused harm to citizens, leading a state Medicaid program to dramatically overpay.

FDA urged to ban cola caramel coloring
by Food Safety News Rn T.Com
Washington, D.C.-based Center for Science in the Public Interest filed a petition Wednesday asking that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration ban two types of carcinogenic chemicals often labeled as "caramel coloring," most often on products like Coca-Cola, Pepsi and other dark-colored colas.According to CSPI, the artificial brown coloring is made by reacting sugars with ammonia and sulfites under high pressure and temperatures and those reactions "result in the formation of 2-methylimidazole and 4 methylimidazole, which in government-conducted studies caused lung, liver, or thyroid cancer or leukemia in laboratory mice or rats."CSPI referred to a National Institutes of Health National Toxicology Program study that found "clear evidence" that both 2-MI and 4 MI are animal carcinogens.
Click here to read the story
Read more: RN-T.com - FDA urged to ban cola caramel coloring
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FDA RECALL
.
Voluntary Nationwide Recall of Jantoven® Warfarin Sodium Tablets, USP, 3mg, Due to Mislabeled Bottles
By Upsher-Smith LaboratoriesFeb 17, 2011 - 8:51:06 AM

HealthNewsDigest.com) - MAPLE GROVE, Minn., -- Upsher-Smith Laboratories, Inc., of Maple Grove, Minnesota is voluntarily recalling one lot (lot #284081) of Jantoven® Warfarin Sodium, USP, 3mg Tablets, an anticoagulant with an expiration date of September 2012, NDC # 0832-1214-00. The company is initiating the recall as a precautionary measure after a single bottle labeled as Jantoven® Warfarin Sodium, USP, 3mg Tablets was found to contain tablets at a higher, 10mg strength before it was dispensed. To date, the company has identified no additional mislabeled bottles.

At Upsher-Smith, patient safety is of foremost concern.

The primary risk of substituting 10mg warfarin for 3mg warfarin is overdosing more than 3 times the labeled amount which leads to excessive anticoagulation that could be expected to result in life-threatening hemorrhage in patients.Consistent, continuous dosing of warfarin is necessary for optimal care for many ill patients. For this reason, patients' doses must be adjusted by regular measurements of the degree of anticoagulation to assure warfarin use is safe and effective. Either abrupt interruption of this medication, or administration of an inappropriately high dose, could present a serious health risk. Patients should check with their health care provider regarding the appropriateness of their current therapy prior to making any change.

The two Jantoven tablets can be readily identified by color: the 3mg tablet is tan and the 10mg tablet is white. In addition, the 3mg tablet is imprinted with the letters WRF, a line, and the number 3 below the line. The reverse side of the 3mg tablet carries the number 832. The 10mg tablet is imprinted with the letters WRF, a line, and the number 10 below the line. The reverse side of the 10mg tablet carries the number 832.Upsher-Smith Laboratories is working cooperatively with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to implement a nationwide recall as quickly and efficiently as possible.The product lot was distributed to wholesalers, retail chains and independent pharmacies throughout the United States.

The company is notifying its pharmacy customers and wholesalers, and arranging for the return of all recalled product. The product was packaged at the Upsher-Smith plant in Plymouth, Minnesota.Consumers and pharmacists can call the Upsher-Smith medical information line at 1-888-650-3789 for more information and to access product details, Monday-Friday between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. (CST).Any adverse reactions may be reported to the FDA's MedWatch Adverse Event Reporting program either online, by regular mail or by fax.Online: www.fda.gov/MedWatch/report.htm Use postage-paid, pre addressed Form FDA 3500 available at: www.fda.gov/MedWatch/getforms.htm .
Mail to address on the pre-addressed form. Fax: 1-800-FDA-0178

About Upsher-SmithUpsher-Smith Laboratories, Inc., founded in 1919, is a privately held pharmaceutical company that develops, manufactures and markets prescription and over-the-counter products. Upsher-Smith's product portfolio focuses in the areas of women's health, dermatology, cardiology, and CNS diseases. Upsher-Smith is headquartered in Maple Grove, Minn. For more information, visit http://www.upsher-smith.com/.
Web Site: http://www.upsher-smith.com/


Friday, February 11, 2011

Hepatitis C New Drugs In The News Feb 11

Included in this blog entry; From Jan 2011 News "Testing all-oral regimens with and without ribavirin in treatment-naive patients." (see below)

HCV Advocates Pipeline Updated (Feb 10)
HCV Drug Pipeline

.,INX-08189 (“INX-189”)

Inhibitex Receives Fast Track Designation for INX-189 for the Treatment of Chronic Hepatitis C Infections

,Released: 02/11/11 07:00 AM EST
Inhibitex, Inc. (Nasdaq: INHX) today reported that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) has designated the investigation of INX-08189 (“INX-189”), a potent guanosine nucleotide polymerase inhibitor for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C viral infection, as a Fast Track development program. Under the FDA Modernization Act of 1997, Fast Track programs are designed to facilitate the development and expedite the review of new drugs that are intended to treat serious or life threatening conditions and that demonstrate the potential to address unmet medical needs. The characteristics of INX-189 that contributed to it being granted Fast Track status include a high genetic barrier to resistance, its pan-genotypic activity, and once-daily oral dosing.

02/11/11 Inhibitex Receives Fast Track Designation for INX-189 for the Treatment of Chronic Hepatitis C Infections
02/09/11 Inhibitex to Present at the Leerink Swann Hot Topics in Therapeutics Roundtable Conference
01/09/11 Inhibitex Reports Positive Interim Safety and Antiviral Data from Ongoing Phase 1b Study of HCV Nucleotide Inhibitor INX-189

Idenix Updates

Webcast
Idenix Pharmaceuticals, Inc. at Leerink Swann & Company Hot Topics in Therapeutics: Roundtable Conference (Live) 02/16/11 at 2:20 p.m. ET

Idenix Pharmaceuticals Provides Updates on Three Clinical Development Programs
* The FDA removes the full clinical hold on IDX184, and places it on partial clinical hold; Idenix anticipates initiating a Phase IIb study in the second half of 2011* The company discontinues clinical development of IDX320* The FDA places GSK2248761 ('761, formerly IDX899) on clinical hold

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Feb. 9, 2011 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ --
Idenix Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Nasdaq: IDIX), a biopharmaceutical company engaged in the discovery and development of drugs for the treatment of human viral diseases, today announced updates to three clinical development programs.

IDX184, a liver-targeted HCV nucleotide prodrug
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has verbally informed Idenix that the full clinical hold for IDX184 has been removed. The program has been placed on partial clinical hold, and Idenix anticipates initiating a Phase IIb12-week trial of IDX184 in combination with pegylated interferon and ribavirin in the second half of 2011.

The clinical hold was issued in September 2010 as a result of three cases of elevated liver function tests observed during a drug-drug interaction study of the combination of IDX184 and IDX320, an HCV protease inhibitor, in healthy volunteers. Idenix reviewed available data and conducted additional preclinical studies. With the help of independent experts and an external safety committee, the company concluded that the observed toxicity was likely caused by IDX320. Idenix submitted a response to the clinical hold to the FDA in January 2011.
IDX320, an HCV protease inhibitor

Based on Idenix's conclusion that the observed toxicity in the drug-drug interaction study was likely caused by IDX320, the company has discontinued the development of IDX320. Next generation protease inhibitors that may potentially avoid the observed hepatotoxicity are in preclinical development at Idenix.

GSK2248761 ('761, formerly IDX899), an HIV non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor
Idenix was informed by ViiV Healthcare Company (ViiV), an affiliate of GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), that '761, a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor drug candidate for the treatment of HIV/AIDS licensed by Idenix to GSK, was placed on clinical hold by the FDA. ViiV has full responsibility for the development of '761, including any regulatory interactions.
Under the collaboration arrangement between Idenix and GSK, Idenix has received $60.5 million in license fees, equity investment and milestone payments to date and is eligible to receive up to $390.0 million in additional milestone payments as well as double-digit tiered royalties on worldwide product sales.

About Idenix
Idenix Pharmaceuticals, Inc., headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is a biopharmaceutical company engaged in the discovery and development of drugs for the treatment of human viral diseases. Idenix's current focus is on the treatment of patients with chronic hepatitis C infection. For further information about Idenix, please refer to http://www.idenix.com/.

Forward-Looking Statements
This press release contains "forward-looking statements" for purposes of the safe harbor provisions of The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including but not limited to the statements regarding the company's future business and financial performance. For this purpose, any statements contained herein that are not statements of historical fact may be deemed forward-looking statements. Without limiting the foregoing, the words "expect," "plans," "anticipates," "will," and similar expressions are also intended to identify forward-looking statements, as are expressed or implied statements with respect to the company's potential pipeline candidates, including any expressed or implied statements regarding the efficacy and safety of our drug candidates, the likelihood and success of any future clinical trials involving our drug candidates.

Actual results may differ materially from those indicated by such forward-looking statements as a result of risks and uncertainties, including but not limited to the following: there can be no guarantees that the company will advance any clinical product candidate or other component of its potential pipeline to the clinic, to the regulatory process or to commercialization; management's expectations could be affected by unexpected regulatory actions or delays; uncertainties relating to, or unsuccessful results of, clinical trials, including additional data relating to the ongoing clinical trials evaluating its product candidates; the company's ability to obtain additional funding required to conduct its research, development and commercialization activities; the company's dependence on its collaborations with Novartis Pharma AG and GlaxoSmithKline; changes in the company's business plan or objectives; the ability of the company to attract and retain qualified personnel; competition in general; and the company's ability to obtain, maintain and enforce patent and other intellectual property protection for its product candidates and its discoveries. Such forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such statements.

These and other risks which may impact management's expectations are described in greater detail under the heading "Risk Factors" in each of the company's annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2009 and quarterly report on form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2010, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and in any subsequent periodic or current report that the company files with the SEC.
All forward-looking statements reflect the company's estimates only as of the date of this release (unless another date is indicated) and should not be relied upon as reflecting the company's views, expectations or beliefs at any date subsequent to the date of this release. While Idenix may elect to update these forward-looking statements at some point in the future, it specifically disclaims any obligation to do so, even if the company's estimates change.

Idenix Pharmaceuticals Contacts:
Kelly Barry (617) 995-9033 (media)
Eric Hoffman (617) 224-4485 (investors)
SOURCE Idenix Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Investment News;

The Silver Lining to Idenix's Bad News
By Brett Chase Feb 11, 2011 7:45 am

Idenix (IDIX) lost a quarter of its market value after the company said the government halted human studies of its AIDS drug, a move that threatens hundreds of millions of dollars in potential revenue.

So why are some analysts recommending buying the stock ?

The Food and Drug Administration is lifting a hold on testing Idenix's hepatitis C drug in the middle-stage of human studies. The FDA halted a trial in September because of concerns about the drug’s potential risk for liver damage. Idenix was testing two hepatitis C drugs and determined that one was probably the cause of concern. That drug is being scrapped while Idenix plans to resume testing the other later this year. With $37 million in cash, Idenix needs to find a partner to help develop the hepatitis drug, IDX184.

But that was expected and analysts say that the FDA’s action will draw potential partners who want a piece of the hepatitis C market. “Lifting the full clinical hold on IDX184 in a relatively short period of time allows the most important asset of Idenix to move forward and Idenix to return to partnership discussions at a pivotal time for the (hepatitis C) field,” Leerink Swann analyst Howard Liang says. He rates the stock a buy with a price target of $5.The company’s cash is enough to fund its operations for the next year, William Blair analyst John Sonnier estimates. Citing the interest in hepatitis C treatments, he rates the stock a buy.Hepatitis C is a liver-eroding virus that infected an estimated 3 to 4 million people in the US over the past 35 years. Worldwide, that figure is about 170 million.Idenix, Merck (MRK), Vertex (VRTX), Abbott Laboratories (ABT), Bristol-Myers (BMY) and other companies are testing treatments because health officials expect to see more cases of the virus. The effects of hepatitis C don’t usually show up until the liver is badly deteriorated and that can take years. Some people carried the virus around over the past three decades after being infected by dirty needles or blood transfusions.

Read More...http://www.minyanville.com/businessmarkets/articles/idenix-hep-c-drug-glaxo-smith/2/11/2011/id/32739
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TMC649128, a nucleoside NS5B polymerase inhibitor
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Medivir initiates Hepatitis C polymerase inhibitor Phase 1a trial
Medivir, an emerging Swedish research-based specialty pharmaceutical company focused on infectious diseases, has started the double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, single-ascending dose phase 1a clinical trial with TMC649128 in Belgium.
The trial aims to assess the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics in healthy volunteers.
TMC649128, a nucleoside NS5B polymerase inhibitor with an exciting pre-clinical profile, is indicated for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus infection (HCV).
TMC649128 is being developed in collaboration with Ortho Biotech Products, an affiliate of Tibotec Pharmaceuticals, for which a milestone payment of EUR7m has been paid to Medivir.
Medivir chief scientific officer Bertil Samuelsson said the start of the phase 1a trial underlines the company's commitment to the development of novel and innovative hepatitis C treatments, and a TMC649128 component could be a unique departure from other HCV drug classes.
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The Press Release; Hepatitis C ; TMC649128 Start of Phase 1a Trial

From Jan 2011 News;Testing all-oral regimens with and without ribavirin in treatment-naive patients..

The Partnership

Bristol-Myers Squibb and Pharmasset Enter into a Clinical Collaboration Agreement for Proof of Concept Combination Study in Patients Chronically Infected with Hepatitis C

The Bad Economy and the Pharmaceutical Companies

If you follow the pharmaceutical news (one great site is Pharmalot), you may have discovered the economic downturn these companies are experiencing. One big player Merck has implemented cost cutting strategies in the past by cutting 17,500 jobs following the merger with Schering-Plough. In todays UK article from FT.com entitled "Drugs: Supply running low"by Andrew Jack, the author writes; "Industry estimates of the average cost of bringing a drug to market have jumped in the past two decades from $150m to $2bn". The article covers budget cuts in the pharmaceutial industry touching on America and the global crisis with reference to US pharmaceutical cutting research budgets and moving into non-prescription medicines such as multivitamins. Quoted from the article "A global crisis in productivity, which threatens to leave expensive research laboratories worldwide – like America’s industrial-age “Rust Belt” factories before them – at the mercy of the wrecking ball." Check out the article here.

Enter the collaborative effort of two drug companies;
Recently two pharmaceutical companies Bristol-Myers Squibb and Pharmasset have joined in an collaborative effort on clinical testing for the hepatitis C treatment regimen consisting of BMS-790052 and PSI-7977. The companies will be testing all-oral regimens with and without ribavirin in treatment-naive patients. With this collaboration the drug companies will cut costs and possibly speed up the drug development process . We should benefit with potentially better drugs to treat HCV.

The Deal

From INVITO
Jess Merrill

Bristol-Myers/Pharmasset: Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. and Pharmasset Inc have teamed up in a clinical partnership that marks the first cross-company collaboration to study two investigational oral drugs for the treatment of hepatitis C. The firms announced plans to study Bristol's NS5A replication complex inhibitor BMS-790052 and Pharmasset's nucleotide polymerase inhibitor on Jan. 10.

Drug makers do not generally collaborate on clinical trials for investigative drugs for competitive reasons and tend instead to study combinations within their own pipelines or with at least one already marketed drug. Regulatory uncertainties and, perhaps, just as important, cultural resistance, also present hurdles. But novel-novel combinations increasingly are viewed as the best way to treat certain serious diseases, like cancer and hepatitis C, and have become more common.

In hepatitis C specifically, the primary drug development focus is on combinations that could replace or reduce the use of the current standard of care, ribavirin and pegylated interferon (Roche's Pegasys or Merck's Pegintron), a regimen with a hasty side effect profile and limited efficacy. Bristol's decision to sign a clinical trial collaboration rather than in-licensing a polymerase inhibitor is intersting since the company recently acquired its hepatitsi C partner ZymoGenetics to gain more control over the program. -- Read More...............

From Pharmasset;

Planned Studies

PSI-7977 and BMS-790052 (NS5a) combination study – anticipated initiation first half calendar 2011 (conducted by Bristol-Myers Squibb)
24-week Phase 2b study of PSI-7977 in combination with Peg-IFN/RBV - second calendar quarter of 2011
PSI-938 and PSI-7977 Phase 2 combination study – anticipated initiation mid year calendar 2011

INFORM-SVR – RG7128 and ritonavir boosted RG7227 (protease inhibitor) anticipated initiation first half calendar 2011 (conducted by Roche)

Pharmasset Interferon-Free Combination Trials

PSI-7977 and PSI-938 combination (Phase 1, Part 2)

In December 2010, Pharmasset initiated Part 2 of a Phase 1 study that includes the first combinations of a purine (PSI-938) and a pyrimidine (PSI-7977) nucleotide analog for the treatment of HCV. The cohorts within Part 2 are expected to evaluate PSI-938 QD as monotherapy and in combination with PSI-7977 QD. The primary objective of Part 2 of this study is to assess the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of PSI-938 alone and in combination with PSI-7977 in individuals with HCV GT1 for 14 days. The secondary objective of Part 2 of this study is to evaluate the short-term change in HCV RNA. Forty patients with HCV genotype 1 are expected to be randomized into one of four cohorts (10 patients per cohort, n = 8 and placebo = 2).

We expect to report preliminary results from Part 2 of this Phase 1 study during the first quarter of calendar year 2011. We also expect to initiate a Phase 2b study of PSI-938 in combination with PSI-7977 during mid (calendar year) 2011. This Phase 2b study will explore dosing durations of PSI-938 and PSI-7977, with and without ribavirin, and with an SVR endpoint.

Pharmasset Calendar Year 2011 Anticipated Milestones:

-- Pharmasset expects to report SVR12 data from its ongoing phase 2b trial with PSI-7977 in HCV genotype 2/3 patients in the second quarter of 2011

-- Pharmasset expects to report the 12 week interim analysis from its PSI-7977 Phase 2b genotype 1 arms in the second quarter of 2011

-- Pharmasset expects to initiate a 24 week Phase 2b trial with PSI-7977 in the second quarter of 2011

-- Pharmasset expects to initiate a Phase 2 study with PSI-7977 and PSI-938 in mid-2011

-- Pharmasset plans to file an IND for PSI-661 in the first quarter of 2011 and to initiate a phase 1 trial in the second quarter of 2011

-- Roche expects to initiate INFORM-SVR with RG7128 and RG7227 in the first quarter of 2011
-- Roche expects to initiate a phase 2 study with RG7128 in HCV genotype 2/3 patients in the first half of 2011
-- Roche expects to initiate a phase 3 program with RG7128 in 2011

About PSI-7977PSI-7977 is a uracil nucleotide analog inhibitor of the NS5B polymerase being developed for the treatment of chronic HCV infection. Nucleotide analog polymerase inhibitors work by acting as alternative substrates that block the synthesis of HCV RNA, which is essential for the virus to replicate. PSI-7977 has been studied in combination with peginterferon and ribavirin for up to 12 weeks in genotype 1, 2 or 3 patients and is currently in two Phase 2b studies, one of which is investigating an interferon sparing regimen in genotype 2 or 3 patients. PSI-7977 is also being investigated in a 14-day combination study with PSI-938, a guanine nucleotide analog.

About BMS-790052BMS-790052 is an investigational oral hepatitis C NS5A replication complex inhibitor. NS5A is one of the essential components for HCV replication. BMS-790052 is one of several molecules Bristol-Myers Squibb is studying for the potential treatment of chronic hepatitis C. The portfolio of investigational compounds, which also includes a novel pegylated interferon lambda, fits into the company's overall R&D focus on diseases where there is major unmet medical need.

Symposium on Hepatitis C virus management held at Nust
http://www.thenews.com/
Our correspondent Friday, February 11, 2011 Islamabad

Due to unprecedented increase in pollution, industrial mobilisation at fast pace and other related reasons; the developing countries like Pakistan have become susceptible to health hazards, said Comstech Adviser Science Dr. Anwar Nasim. Addressing the 1st Annual Hepatitis C Virus Management Symposium held here on Thursday, he said the swift rise in cases of Hepatitis C Virus has already rung the alarm bells. It is therefore imperative that well thought-out efforts, both at individual and institutional levels, be made to eradicate this growing nuisance from the country.

The two-day event has been organised by the NUST Centre of Virology and Immunology (NCVI) in collaboration with Higher Education Commission (HEC). The target audience of the symposium are scientists, clinical pathologists, students and selected members of the community. The theme of the seminar is to share knowledge, new research areas, unexplored territories and experiences regarding Hepatitis C virus and associated diseases. Dr. Anwar Nasim asserted one of the most serious contemporary challenges that the human society faced was to effectively cope with the life threatening diseases, saying that human health is the most precious asset for any nation without which it becomes too weak to confront the emerging challenges.

Hepatitis C is an infectious disease of the liver that in majority of cases acts as a silent killer and is rising alarmingly throughout the world including Pakistan, he added. He was all praise for NUST to have established Centre of Virology and Immunology with state-of-the-art laboratories and staff comprising distinguished and experienced scientists. Eulogising the endeavours the university had taken towards the promotion of science and technology, he stressed the need for dissemination of scientific information that could help confront challenges of diversified nature.Dr. Ishtiaq Qadri, NCVI Principal, in his inaugural address welcomed the chief guest and other participants of the symposium.

He also pointed out that epidemics of HCV had plagued the entire developing world including Pakistan, saying HCV associated diseases impose heavy burdens on national economies and individual families due to costs arising from acute and chronic morbidity and mortality. The aim of the symposium is to address Hepatitis C spread in Pakistan, which is the major cause of liver diseases like liver steatosis, liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, he maintained.He said that they had tried to provide a forum whereby the investigators from across the country could introduce new work for peer review and discussion focusing on HCV management. Dr. Muhammad Idrees from CEMB gave his presentation on the changing epidemiology pattern and frequency distribution of HCV in Pakistan.

FDA Updates: Boceprevir and Telaprevir
.Boceprevir Receives FDA Priority Review and EMA Accelerated Assessment
Telaprevir "Gets FDA Priority Review" In U.S. and Canada/Jan 20
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Thursday, February 10, 2011

Hepatitis C ; TMC649128 Start of Phase 1a Trial

HUDDINGE, Sweden, February 10, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- Medivir AB (OMX: MVIR), the emerging research-based specialty pharmaceutical company focused on infectious diseases, today announces the start of a phase 1a clinical trial with TMC649128 intended for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus infection.

TMC649128 is a nucleoside NS5B polymerase inhibitor that has already demonstrated an attractive pre-clinical profile. It is anticipated that this profile would see TMC649128 be used in combination with HCV directly acting antiviral agents, given their high genetic barrier to resistance and antiviral activity across multiple HCV genotypes.

In pre-clinical studies, TMC649128 displayed in vitro activity across multiple HCV genotypes and a high genetic barrier to resistance.

The phase 1a trial is a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled single-ascending dose trial to assess the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics in healthy volunteers and will be conducted in Belgium. TMC649128 is being developed in collaboration with Tibotec Pharmaceuticals.

Milestone payment

Medivir entered a Research and Development agreement in the field of hepatitis C virus polymerase with Ortho Biotech Products LP, an affiliate of Tibotec in May 2008. The development of TMC649128 falls under this agreement and by entering clinical development, a milestone payment of Euro 7 million has been triggered for payment to Medivir.

"We are extremely excited to see TMC649128, our first HCV nucleoside inhibitor, move into clinical development", stated Bertil Samuelsson, CSO of Medivir. "The start of this phase 1a trial underlines Medivir's commitment to the development of novel and innovative hepatitis C treatments. We view nucleoside inhibitors as cornerstone components of future HCV treatment paradigms in combination with directly acting antiviral agents and a TMC649128 component could set them apart from other HCV drug classes."

About Hepatitis C

Hepatitis C is a blood-borne infectious disease of the liver and is a leading cause of chronic liver disease and liver transplants. The WHO estimates that nearly 180 million people worldwide, or approximately 3% of the world's population, are infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV). The CDC has reported that almost three million people in the United States are chronically infected with HCV.

About Medivir's Commitment of the HCV Area

Medivir and Tibotec are also jointly developing the once daily protease inhibitor TMC435 for treatment of hepatitis C virus infections (HCV).

About Medivir

Medivir is an emerging research-based specialty pharmaceutical company focused on the development of high-value treatments for infectious diseases. Medivir has world class expertise in polymerase and protease drug targets and drug development. Medivir has a strong R&D portfolio and has recently launched its first product Xerese(TM)/Xerclear(R). Medivir's key pipeline asset, TMC435, a protease inhibitor, is in phase 2b clinical development for Hepatitis C and is partnered with Tibotec Pharmaceuticals.

Xerese(TM)/Xerclear(R) is an innovative treatment for cold sores, which has been approved in both the US and Europe. It is partnered with GlaxoSmithKline to be sold OTC in Europe and Russia and with Meda AB in North America. Medivir has retained the Rx rights for Xerclear(R) in Sweden and Finland.

For more information about Medivir, please visit the Company's website: http://www.medivir.se

For more information about Medivir, please contact; Medivir (http://www.medivir.se) Rein Piir, CFO & VP Investor Relations Mobile: +46-708-537-292 M:Communications Europe: Mary-Jane Elliott / Amber Bielecka / Nick Francis Medivir@mcomgroup.com +44(0)20-7920-2330 USA: Jason Marshall +1-212-897-5497
SOURCEMedivir