SOURCE: DOR BioPharma, Inc.
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September 17, 2008 07:00 ET
DOR BioPharma Forms orBec® European Medical Advisory Board
EWING, NJ--(Marketwire - September 17, 2008) - DOR BioPharma, Inc. (DOR or the Company) (OTCBB: DORB), a late-stage biopharmaceutical company developing products to treat
life-threatening side effects of cancer treatments and serious
gastrointestinal diseases, and vaccines against certain bioterrorism
agents, announced today the formation of a European Medical Advisory Board
(MAB) to provide medical/clinical strategic guidance to the Company as it
relates to the ongoing development of orBec® for the treatment of
gastrointestinal Graft-versus-Host disease (GI GVHD).
The MAB will play a crucial advisory role in the design of future clinical
studies and associated interactions with the European Medicines Evaluation
Agency (EMEA). The European MAB is made up of physicians with extensive
backgrounds in the field of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation
(HCT), the clinical setting in which GI GVHD occurs. DOR's new MAB members
are from a diverse array of European countries, and will bring a unique
European perspective to the strategic development of orBec®. The MAB will
be chaired by George B. McDonald, MD, Professor of Medicine at the
University of Washington, Member at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research
Center, inventor of orBec® and a consultant to DOR.
Dr. McDonald stated, "I am pleased with the caliber of the orBec® Medical
Advisory Board we have selected from key European countries. This
experienced and respected group of leading hematopoietic cell transplant
oncologists has been assembled based on their substantial practice and
research contributions in the transplant field in their own institutions.
Their collective research efforts have had a clinical impact worldwide. We
are very much looking forward to their productive involvement with the
orBec® program in Europe."
"We are very excited to be able to attract key European opinion leaders to
participate in the development of orBec® as members of our Medical
Advisory Board," stated Christopher J. Schaber, PhD, President and Chief
Executive Officer of DOR. "The formation of a European Board, in concert
with the North American Medical Advisory Board established last year, will
provide us with critical medical guidance to continue the development of
orBec® so that we may make it available to the patients who so
desperately require a therapeutic option. The availability of orBec® in
Europe under named patient protocols is an important step forward in the
treatment for GI GVHD."
The orBec® European MAB Members
George B. McDonald, MD, is a Professor of Medicine at the University of
Washington, School of Medicine, and a Member at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center, where he is head of the Gastroenterology/Hepatology
Section. He also serves as the head of the Program in Complications of
Cancer Treatment that has as its goals the reduction of morbidity from
cancer treatment, improved survival, and prevention of late sequelae of
cancer treatment. Dr. McDonald's research is focused on gastrointestinal
and hepatobiliary complications of HCT, specifically problems involving the
toxicity of high-dose myeloablative regimens that are used to prepare
patients for transplant and acute and chronic GVHD involving the
gastrointestinal tract and liver. He has recently developed and validated a
new method of assessing the severity of acute GVHD, called the acute GVHD
Activity Index, an accurate predictor of transplant-related mortality. He
was the lead investigator on the clinical trials that pioneered the use of
topical corticosteroid therapy with oral beclomethasone dipropionate for GI
GVHD.
Dietger Niederwieser, MD, is the Head of the Department of Hematology and
Oncology at the University of Leipzig in Leipzig, Germany. Professor
Niederwieser is the current President of the European Group for Blood and
Marrow Transplantation (EBMT). He has been active with EBMT for the past 20
years, previously serving as the Chairman of the Chronic Leukemia Working
Party. He has published more than 300 papers focusing on topics such as the
immunology of stem cell transplantation (SCT), minor histocompatibility
antigens, graft-versus-tumour reactions, reduced intensity conditioning
SCT, standardization of procedures and donor-transmitted diseases. Prof.
Niederwieser was trained in Internal Medicine and Haematology at Innsbruck
in Austria, and received specialized training on clinical SCT and
pathophysiology of GVHD in Basel, Switzerland and Seattle, Washington, USA.
He has received a number of awards including the doctor honoris causa of
the University of Thessaloniki and the title of Cavaliere della Repubblica
Italiana from the Presidente della Repubblica Italiana Napolitano.
Jane Apperley, MD, is the Chair of the Department of Hematology at the
Imperial College and the Chief of Service for Clinical Hematology at the
Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust in London, England. She qualified in
Medicine from the University of Birmingham and after initial specialization
in internal medicine she completed specialist training in hematology in
Birmingham, London, Cambridge and Boston. Her particular interests are the
biology and management of chronic myeloid leukemia, which has led naturally
to an extensive experience in SCT and more recently to the use of signal
transduction inhibitors in this disease. Professor Apperley is the
past-President of both the EBMT and the British Society of Blood and Marrow
Transplantation and serves on the Advisory Board of the CIBMTR CLINT
(Facilitating International Prospective Clinical Trials in Stem Cell
Transplantation).
Andrea Bacigalupo, MD, is the Head of the Department of Hematology at
Ospedale San Martino in Genoa, Italy, where he has served in various
capacities since 1974. Dr. Bacigalupo's BMT work began in 1976 in Genoa on
allogeneic BMT. He has worked for many years within the EBMT since 1983,
and has served as President. He is a member of the International Society
for Experimental Hematology and the Societa' Italiana Ematologia. Dr.
Bacigalupo has published more than 300 articles in peer-reviewed journals.
His research interests lie in bone marrow transplantation, leukemia, graft
versus leukemia, aplastic anemia, in vitro growth of progenitor cells,
growth factors, CMV, data management, and patient oriented computer-based
monitoring.
José Antonio Pérez Simón, MD, PhD, is an Attending Physician in the Bone
Marrow Transplant Unit in the University Hospital in Salamanca, Spain, and
leads the Cellular Therapy Laboratory of the Department of Hematology in
the area of Immunology of Bone Marrow Transplantation. He completed his
clinical training in BMT at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and
his laboratory training at the Karolinska Institute. He has multiple
peer-review publications and his major contributions have been in the field
of GVHD both in the clinical setting as well as in the basic research.
Hans Hägglund, MD, PhD, is an Associate Professor of Hematology and
Internal Medicine Specialist in the Department of Hematology at the
Karolinska University Hospital in Huddinge, Sweden. Dr Hägglund completed
a post-doc position at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. He has
multiple peer-review publications in the field of SCT, lymphoma and acute
lymphoblastic leukemia. He is a committee member of the Swedish Hematology
Association and the national acute lymphoblastic leukemia group.
About orBec®
orBec® represents a first-of-its-kind oral, locally acting therapy
tailored to treat the gastrointestinal manifestation of GVHD, the organ
system where GVHD is most frequently encountered and highly problematic.
orBec® is intended to reduce the need for systemic immunosuppressive
drugs to treat GI GVHD. BDP is a highly potent, topically active
corticosteroid that has a local effect on inflamed tissue. BDP has been
marketed in the US and worldwide since the early 1970s as the active
pharmaceutical ingredient in a nasal spray and in a metered dose inhaler
for the treatment of patients with allergic rhinitis and asthma. orBec®
is formulated for oral administration as a single product consisting of two
tablets; one tablet is intended to release BDP in the proximal portions of
the GI tract, and the other tablet is intended to release BDP in the distal
portions of the GI tract.
In addition to issued patents and pending worldwide patent applications
held by or exclusively licensed to DOR, orBec® also benefits from orphan
drug designations in the US and in Europe for the treatment of GI GVHD,
which provide for seven and 10 years of post-approval market exclusivity,
respectively.
About GI GVHD
GI GVHD is a debilitating and painful disease. It is a common disorder
among immuno-compromised cancer patients after receiving allogeneic stem
cell or bone marrow transplants. Unlike organ transplants where the
patient's body may reject the organ, in GVHD it is the donor cells that
begin to attack the patient's body -- most frequently the gastrointestinal
tract, liver and skin. Patients with mild-to-moderate GI GVHD typically
develop symptoms of anorexia, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. If left
untreated, GI GVHD can progress to ulcerations in the lining of the GI
tract, and in its most severe form, can be fatal.
About Allogeneic Bone Marrow/Stem Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT)
HSCT is considered a potentially curative option for many leukemias as well
as other forms of blood cancer. In an allogeneic HSCT procedure,
hematopoietic stem cells are harvested from a closely matched relative or
unrelated person, and are transplanted into the patient following either
high-dose chemotherapy or intense immunosuppressive conditioning therapy.
The curative potential of allogeneic HSCT is now partly attributed to the
so-called graft-versus-leukemia or graft-versus-tumor effects of the newly
transplanted donor cells to recognize and destroy malignant cells in the
recipient patient.
The use of allogeneic HSCT has grown substantially over the last decade due
to advances in human immunogenetics, the establishment of unrelated donor
programs, the use of cord blood as a source of hematopoietic stem cells and
the advent of non-myeloablative conditioning regimens ("mini-transplants")
that avoid the side effects of high-dose chemotherapy. Based on the latest
statistics available, it is estimated that there are more than 12,000 HSCT
procedures annually in the US and a comparable number in Europe. Estimates
as to the current annual rate of increase in these procedures are as high
as 20%. High rates of morbidity and mortality occur in this patient
population. Clinical trials are also underway testing allogeneic HSCT for
treatment of some metastatic solid tumors such as breast cancer, renal cell
carcinoma, melanoma and ovarian cancer. Allogeneic transplants have also
been used as curative therapy for several genetic disorders, including
immunodeficiency syndromes, inborn errors of metabolism, thalassemia and
sickle cell disease. The primary toxicity of allogeneic HSCT, however, is
GVHD. In GVHD, the newly transplanted donor cells damage cells in the
recipient's gastrointestinal tract, liver and skin.
About DOR BioPharma, Inc.
DOR BioPharma, Inc. (DOR) is a late-stage biopharmaceutical company
developing products to treat life-threatening side effects of cancer
treatments and serious gastrointestinal diseases, and vaccines for certain
bioterrorism agents. DOR's lead product, orBec® (oral beclomethasone
dipropionate or BDP), is a potent, locally acting corticosteroid being
developed for the treatment of gastrointestinal Graft-versus-Host disease
(GI GVHD), a common and potentially life-threatening complication of bone
marrow transplantation. DOR filed a New Drug Application for orBec® with
the FDA for the treatment of acute GI GVHD and received a not approvable
letter in which the FDA has requested data from a confirmatory Phase 3
clinical trial to demonstrate the safety and efficacy of orBec®.
orBec® is currently the subject of an NIH-supported, Phase 2, randomized,
double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in the prevention of acute GVHD.
Oral BDP may also have application in treating other gastrointestinal
disorders characterized by severe inflammation. Additionally, DOR has a
Lipid Polymer Micelle (LPM™) drug delivery technology for the oral
delivery of leuprolide for the treatment of prostate cancer and
endometriosis.
Through its Biodefense Division, DOR is developing biomedical
countermeasures pursuant to the Project BioShield Act of 2004. DOR's
biodefense products in development are recombinant subunit vaccines
designed to protect against the lethal effects of exposure to ricin toxin,
botulinum toxin and anthrax. DOR's ricin toxin vaccine, RiVax, has been
shown to be well tolerated and immunogenic in a Phase 1 clinical trial in
normal volunteers.
For further information regarding DOR BioPharma, Inc., please visit the
Company's website located at www.dorbiopharma.com.
This press release contains forward-looking statements that reflect DOR
BioPharma, Inc.'s current expectations about its future results,
performance, prospects and opportunities. Statements that are not
historical facts, such as "anticipates," "believes," "intends," or similar
expressions, are forward-looking statements. These statements are subject
to a number of risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause
actual events or results in future periods to differ materially from what
is expressed in, or implied by, these statements. DOR cannot assure you
that it will be able to successfully develop or commercialize products
based on its technology, including orBec®, particularly in light of the
significant uncertainty inherent in developing vaccines against bioterror
threats, manufacturing and conducting preclinical and clinical trials of
vaccines, and obtaining regulatory approvals, that its cash expenditures
will not exceed projected levels, that it will be able to secure
partnerships or obtain financing within the next nine months to meet
operating expenses and to conduct its upcoming confirmatory Phase 3 trial
of orBec®, that product development and commercialization efforts will
not be reduced or discontinued due to difficulties or delays in clinical
trials or due to lack of progress or positive results from research and
development efforts, that it will be able to successfully obtain any
further grants and awards, maintain its existing grants which are subject
to performance, enter into any biodefense procurement contracts with the US
Government or other countries, that the US Congress may not pass any
legislation that would provide additional funding for the Project BioShield
program, that it will be able to patent, register or protect its technology
from challenge and products from competition or maintain or expand its
license agreements with its current licensors, or that its business
strategy will be successful. Important factors which may affect the future
use of orBec® for gastrointestinal GVHD include the risks that: the FDA's
requirement that DOR conduct additional clinical trials to demonstrate the
safety and efficacy of orBec® will take a significant amount of time and
money to complete and positive results leading to regulatory approval
cannot be assumed; DOR is dependent on the expertise, effort, priorities
and contractual obligations of third parties in the clinical trials,
manufacturing, marketing, sales and distribution of its products; orBec®
may not gain market acceptance if it is eventually approved by the FDA; and
others may develop technologies or products superior to orBec®. These and
other factors are described from time to time in filings with the
Securities and Exchange Commission, including, but not limited to, DOR's
most recent reports on Forms 10-Q and 10-KSB. Unless required by law, DOR
assumes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements as
a result of new information, future events.