ABOUT this BLOG and How to use it

WELCOME to Stu's Views & MS News. A product of MS Views and News, a Not-for-Profit [501c3] organization. Founded in 2008, we provide educational Multiple Sclerosis information via live seminars and via the internet.

Key-Notes: Our live seminars average approx 60 people per educational program. Our blog is visited over 2900 times per week and our website is visited by thousands each month.

Register at our website to receive our globally transmitted Multiple Sclerosis e-newsletter, currently being received in (90) Countries.

On this blog see our Directory, Archives, recent Blog Posts & so much more. Use the Blog Search box (enter a keyword). See our Facebook information AND Links to other MS Organizations & bloggers. Scroll through entire page, to find information that could EMPOWER You. At the Bottom of this page, see informational videos and some for fun.

Disclaimer: "Stu's Views & MS News" / 'MS Views and News' does not endorse any products or services found on this blog. It is up to you to seek advice from your healthcare provider. The intent of this blog is to provide information on various medical conditions, medications, treatments, and procedures for your personal knowledge and to keep you informed of current health-related issues. It is not intended to be complete or exhaustive, nor is it a substitute for the advice of your physician. Should you or your family members have any specific medical problem, seek medical care promptly

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Like this blog? - CLICK "LIKE"

Saturday, January 31, 2009

BioMS drug (dirucotide) fails mid-stage study

Reuters-UK
Fri Jan 30, 2009

TORONTO, Jan 30 (Reuters) - BioMS Medical Corp on Friday said its lead drug for the treatment of multiple sclerosis failed to meet a main goal in a mid-stage study , sending the company's shares down more than 50 percent.

The small biotech said the study showed the drug did not prevent symptoms from coming back. People who took the drug were just as likely to have symptoms return after 15 months as patients who did not take it.

"We have long believed that the outcome of this study would be very uncertain, given that this trial was statistically underpowered and that the compound was not previously tested on humans for this indication," Maher Yaghi, an analyst at Desjardins Securities in Montreal, said in a research note.

The drug, which was being tested in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) did, however, show signs of slowing down the progression of the crippling disease.

"The results are more positive than negative," said Douglas Loe, an analyst at Versant Partners. "The aspects by which the drug did perform well in this trial are those that which are germane to performance in its pivotal secondary progressive MS trial, which is a separate clinical program."

Loe said that program is seen as key to partner Eli Lilly (LLY.N), which signed a licensing and development deal with BioMS in 2007.

Multiple sclerosis, a condition in which the body's immune system attacks the protective cover of the nerves, is one of the leading causes of neurological disability in young adults.

BioMS said it will continue to analyze the results of the mid-stage trial.

Dirucotide is also being studied in two late-stage trials -- in the United States and across Europe and Canada -- as a treatment for secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS).

This, Yaghi said, is where the company might find more success.

"The firm may benefit from the drug's potential in SPMS, given that the Phase III studies in this indication are more powered to detect significance (vs the RRMS study) and, in our view, have higher odds of success."

The drug had received fast-track status from U.S. health regulators for the SPMS indication last September, a designation that is reserved for products intended to treat serious or life-threatening conditions with the potential to address unmet medical needs.

BioMS President and Chief Executive Kevin Giese shrugged off the stock performance on Friday.

"I think it is probably knee-jerk. People need to look at the data and see what it really says," Giese said. "Often, when people see the top headline that we failed to meet the primary end-point, they react to that without looking at what we were able to say.

Giese said the company and Lilly will continue to analyze the results of the trial, noting it should not affect its timetable for another trial in the second half of 2009, with an eye for approval in 2011 or 2012.

(Reporting by Scott Anderson, additional reporting by Vidya L Nathan in Bangalore; editing by Rob Wilson).

Posting comments can be beneficial to others and it allows you to express yourself.
If you have a statement or question pertaining to this article, this is the place to leave it.
Click the link below the article that reads: Post Comments. - Thank You
============================================

0 comments: