Inducing P53 gene activation - The next Blockbuster!

anonymous

Guest
It all comes back to Cellceutix chief scientific officer, Dr. Krishna Menon; the man is a real whiz; he played key roles in developing two blockbuster cancer drugs; Gemzar and Alimta for Eli Lilly & Co.(NYSE:LLY) back in the late 90’s.

For CTIX he developed Kevetrin which just received Orphan Drug Designation for the treatment of ovarian cancer.. Kevetrin is successful in regulating the p53 pathway that has long been the holy grail of cancer research and big pharma. Industry leaders spent hundreds of millions of dollars trying to achieve what Dr. Krishna Menon has achieved with Kevetrin.
As anyone in the industry knows, regulating the p53 pathway has long been the holy grail of cancer research and big pharma has spent hundreds of millions of dollars researching ways to achieve this with no success thus far. It seems Kevetrin(TM) has accomplished this; extensive preclinical research on Kevetrin shows the re-activation of p53 across a wide spectrum of cancer lines including colon, lung, breast and pancreatic cancers.

If testing is successful, Mr. Ehrlich says the market potential for Kevetrin in treating drug-resistant cancers is worth $5 billion a year. Other cancers could easily represent an additional $5 billion annually, he adds..
 












It all comes back to Cellceutix chief scientific officer, Dr. Krishna Menon; the man is a real whiz; he played key roles in developing two blockbuster cancer drugs; Gemzar and Alimta for Eli Lilly & Co.(NYSE:LLY) back in the late 90’s.

For CTIX he developed Kevetrin which just received Orphan Drug Designation for the treatment of ovarian cancer.. Kevetrin is successful in regulating the p53 pathway that has long been the holy grail of cancer research and big pharma. Industry leaders spent hundreds of millions of dollars trying to achieve what Dr. Krishna Menon has achieved with Kevetrin.
As anyone in the industry knows, regulating the p53 pathway has long been the holy grail of cancer research and big pharma has spent hundreds of millions of dollars researching ways to achieve this with no success thus far. It seems Kevetrin(TM) has accomplished this; extensive preclinical research on Kevetrin shows the re-activation of p53 across a wide spectrum of cancer lines including colon, lung, breast and pancreatic cancers.

If testing is successful, Mr. Ehrlich says the market potential for Kevetrin in treating drug-resistant cancers is worth $5 billion a year. Other cancers could easily represent an additional $5 billion annually, he adds..
Yes I read about this compound. It is extracted from donkey dung and then mixed with extracts from bed pans in nursing homes. It is then ingested orally.
 












Cellceutix Prepares Phase 2a Ovarian Cancer Trial of Kevetrin, a Novel p53-Modulating Drug Candidate, Based Upon Phase 1 Topline Data
View it in your browser.



Cellceutix Prepares Phase 2a Ovarian Cancer Trial of Kevetrin, a Novel p53-Modulating Drug Candidate, Based Upon Phase 1 Topline Data

BEVERLY, MA –(Marketwired – August 03, 2016) - Cellceutix Corporation, (OTCQB: CTIX) (“the Company”), a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company developing innovative therapies with oncology, dermatology, antibiotic, and anti-inflammatory applications, is pleased to provide topline data on the completed Phase 1 clinical trial of Kevetrin for the treatment of advanced solid tumors, which are among the hardest-to-treat types of cancers.

In the Phase 1 study, conducted at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Kevetrin, which in a preclinical setting has been shown to activate p53 as measured by increased expression of the protein p21, was evaluated following intravenous (IV) administration. Each patient received one dose each week for three weeks across a four-week cycle. The primary objective of this study was to evaluate safety and tolerability of Kevetrin. Secondary objectives were to determine the pharmacokinetic (PK) profile and assess anti-tumor activity of Kevetrin.

The Phase 1 dose-escalation study, with dosing amounts ranging from 10mg/m2 to 750mg/m2, met its primary endpoint in showing no clinically significant adverse effects of Kevetrin in patients based on clinical laboratory parameters through all dosing levels and across the duration of treatment.

With regards to secondary endpoints, it was determined that Kevetrin has a relatively short apparent biological half-life (less than 2 hr) in plasma. Plasma half-life (T1/2) clearance (CL) and volume of distribution (Vd) suggest that drug elimination predominantly involves hepatic mechanisms and Kevetrin undergoes rapid extensive distribution from systemic circulation into tissues. PK data, as measured by AUC and Cmax levels, further revealed that Kevetrin exhibited a dose-dependent response, has as stated a relatively short half-life (approximately 2 hours) and clears the body within one day – on average between 8 and 10 hours – though the drug can remain in the body up to approximately 24 hours, depending upon individual patient variations.

When the duration of the treatment of a disease is shorter than the therapeutic activity of drug, single doses are given. After a single dose IV infusion administration, plasma drug concentration levels rise above and then fall below the minimum effective concentration (MEC – the minimum plasma drug concentration required to produce a desired pharmacological effect in most patients) resulting in decline in therapeutic effect. To treat cancer, multiple IV infusion regimens are required to maintain the plasma drug levels above the MEC, but below the minimum toxic concentration to achieve optimal clinical effectiveness.

Ideally, a dosage regimen is established for each drug to provide the correct plasma level without excessive fluctuation and drug accumulation outside the therapeutic window. Kevetrin has less than a two-hour half-life. PK results indicate that with the current dose regimen Kevetrin is almost completely out of plasma within 24 hr. Therefore, little drug remains for any substantial period of time afterwards.

Based on these findings, we believe the impact of Kevetrin when administered to patients with repeated dosing (3 times per week), as planned in the upcoming ovarian cancer trial, will achieve fairly steady levels of Kevetrin above the MEC. The sustained activation/modulation of p53 will modulate multiple signaling pathways and should substantially increase its therapeutic efficacy.

“Kevetrin is unique in that it is not a chemotherapy and acts by targeting multiple biochemical pathways to control tumor development in cells with diverse mutational background, ,” commented Cellceutix CEO Leo Ehrlich. “Kevetrin has now shown at this stage of its development its enormous potential. We are extremely excited about Kevetrin’s prospects moving forward and feel we have a solid foundation upon which to proceed into advanced trials. To see disease stabilization in this Phase 1 trial with Kevetrin, as previously reported, let alone when optimal dosing has yet to be achieved, is exceptional, and only reinforces what we observed in our preclinical work conducted on animals. That Kevetrin showed clear signs of therapeutic response when it was only in a patient’s body for one day out of seven is encouraging. Additional lab work in animals is underway to better establish the mechanisms by which Kevetrin activates p53. We believe that establishing these data in the coming human trials will increase the demand for and value of Kevetrin many fold. We are also now exploring an oral formulation of Kevetrin, with the hope that Kevetrin can develop into a daily medicine for treating and defeating cancer.”

“Our near-term focus is now on preparing for a Phase 2a trial of Kevetrin in treating late-stage ovarian cancer, which we anticipate will start in the fourth quarter this year,” said Cellceutix President and Chief Medical Officer Dr. Arthur P. Bertolino. “This will be a small trial that will move quickly with the end goal to provide the critical data necessary to forge a partnership with a large pharmaceutical company interested in co-developing Kevetrin as it makes progress toward possibly becoming the first p53-activating drug approved by the FDA.”

Alerts:

Sign-up for Cellceutix email alerts is available at

http://cellceutix.com/email-alerts/ - sthash.CRfqSmmY.k6MzKBo8.dpbs
 












Google Genentech and P 53.. We have the same molecule in phase 1 as well this is just a company that needs to scream look at what we are doing to create some excitement. But If the industry can get these molecules to phase 3 and succeed that would be awesome.