Do these people even know that rodent inflammation is not the same as human inflammation.
$8 Million NIH Grant Will Fund Multicenter Clinical Trial of Stroke Intervention Drug
– Cedars-Sinai
stroke intervention researchers have been informed that the National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, part of the National
Institutes of Health, will award an $8 million grant to fund a
multicenter Phase II clinical trial of an experimental drug for stroke.
The
drug, 3K3A-APC, will be used in combination with recombinant tissue
plasminogen activator, or rtPA – the “clot-busting” drug currently
approved to treat ischemic strokes shortly after onset. In laboratory
rodent studies, 3K3A-APC, used in combination with rtPA, had a
protective effect on the lining of blood vessels, eliminating
hemorrhaging, reducing brain damage, and improving animals’ mobility
after stroke. The new drug has completed a Phase I trial in 64 healthy
volunteers to assess safety and dosing levels.
Ischemic strokes
block arteries, depriving the brain of oxygen. The existing clot-buster,
rtPA, may restore blood flow and often(12% is not often) reverse the effects of a stroke
if administered within three hours after symptoms begin. The drug,
however, increases risk of internal bleeding in some patients, which can
have brain-injuring and other harmful effects.
“Stroke is the
fourth leading cause of death in the United States and a leading cause
of disability, often leaving people to live out their lives with limited
cognitive and physical skills. When patients receive rtPA within the
three-hour time frame, the beneficial effects are often dramatic. But
the drug is not without its limitations and potential side effects. Our
objective in this and other studies is to spare more lives and
livelihoods by making treatments more effective with fewer risks,” said Patrick Lyden, MD, chair of Cedars-Sinai’s Department of Neurology, director of the Stroke Program and the Carmen and Louis Warschaw Chair in Neurology.
The
Phase II study will evaluate safety, tolerability and activity of
3K3A-APC when given after rtPA in patients who have experienced
moderately severe ischemic stroke. The drug will be given intravenously
as a 15-minute infusion every 12 hours for up to five treatments, and
four dose levels will be evaluated. About 100 participants, ages 18 to
80, will be followed for 90 days.
APC – activated protein C – is a
naturally occurring enzyme in the body that reduces inflammation,
protects against cell death and acts as a blood thinner to prevent
clotting. The drug 3K3A-APC is a synthesized and slightly modified
protein that maintains APC’s cell-protective and anti-inflammatory
benefits while reducing anticlotting activity. It is designed,
therefore, to protect brain cells and cerebral blood vessels while
reducing the risk of treatment-related bleeding.
The clinical
trial grant was awarded to Lyden, the study’s principal investigator. He
was also principal investigator of the Phase I trial and a major
contributor to the clinical trial leading to Food and Drug
Administration approval in 1996 of rtPA, still the only proven and
approved drug for stroke treatment.
The award is also in
conjunction with a NeuroNEXT Infrastructure Resource Access award to ZZ
Biotech LLC, the company developing 3K3A-APC. Kent Pryor, PhD, the
company’s chief operating officer, will be the principal investigator
for this aspect of the study. ZZ Biotech will also enlist the
collaboration of NeuroNEXT, a research network funded by the National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.
The institute
created NeuroNEXT – the Network for Excellence in Neuroscience Clinical
Trials – to increase its ability to explore promising treatments by
partnering with academia, private foundations and industry. With this
support, the researchers will have access to the NeuroNEXT Clinical
Coordinating Center at Massachusetts General Hospital and Data
Coordinating Center at the University of Iowa. The University of
Rochester in New York will provide a central laboratory, and about 15
NeuroNEXT centers will participate in the study.
The new drug
originated in the laboratory of John Griffin, PhD, professor in the
Department of Molecular and Experimental Medicine at The Scripps
Research Institute, which licensed development rights to ZZ Biotech.
Berislav
Zlokovic, director of the Zilkha Neurogenetic Institute and professor
and chair of the Department of Physiology and Biophysics at Keck School
of Medicine of the University of Southern California, and scientific
founder of ZZ Biotech, will be a co-investigator of the Phase II trial.
ZZ
Biotech is a company developing APC and related products for stroke and
other neurological disorders. Zlokovic is the scientific founder, Pryor
is the chief operating officer, Griffin is a member of the scientific
advisory board and Lyden is a consultant.
# # #
Study title:
“ZZ-3K3A-201: A multi-center, Phase 2 study using a continual
reassessment method to determine the safety and tolerability of
3K3A-APC, a recombinant variant of human activated protein C (APC), in
combination with tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) in moderately severe
acute hemispheric ischemic stroke.”
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