http://www.timesofisrael.com/nazareth-company-gets-funds-for-stroke-busting-drug/
What do you get when two Israeli Muslims, an
Israeli Jew and an Israeli Christian put their heads together? Well,
since this isn’t a riddle, the answer is a stroke-defeating drug.
Founded
by the husband and wife team of Prof. Abed Higazi and Dr. Noha Higazi,
PamBio, a biotech company, claims to have found a way to halt acute
bleeding and prevent brain damage after a hemorrhagic stroke — a
condition that has no drug treatment today.
Hemorrhagic stroke usually occurs when a small
blood vessel ruptures and bleeds into the brain tissue. The only way to
treat this kind of stroke, which accounts for 10 to 15 percent of all
strokes, is to drill a hole in the skull and relieve the pressure on the
brain. And then wait, and pray, for the bleeding to stop.
Each year, 1.5 million-2 million people suffer
from hemorrhagic stroke worldwide, of whom 31 percent die within a
week, and 59% within a year. Those who survive the stroke suffer from
severe disabilities. The financial toll attributed to stroke in the US
and Europe is estimated at $43.6 billion annually, data provided by
PamBio shows.
Abed Higazi, a clinical biochemist who heads
the Division of Laboratories and the Department of Clinical Biochemistry
at Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem and his wife, Dr. Noha Higazi,
discovered that after a hemorrhagic stroke, the body reacts in a
counterintuitive way: instead of increasing clotting, it increases
anti-coagulant activity. This causes the bleeding to continue, leading
to more damage.
So they set out to find a solution to counter this increased activity, and came up with a drug that seems to do just that.
“We found a solution that inhibits this
activity and stabilizes the number of blood clots, preventing further
bleeding,” Abed Higazi said by phone. “We have a proof of concept after
trying out our medication in pigs and mice, and now we need to take this
to human trials.”
The benefits of the drug — a solution
containing a protein molecule that prevents bleeding that is injected
into the patient intravenously — include minimizing the blood toxicity
in the brain, reduced side effects and strong binding to the target to
minimize the required dose required. The drug also minimizes potential
immunogenicity and organ tissue toxicity, the company said.
Proof of concept studies have shown that
PamBio’s biomolecule reduces bleeding in the brains of mice with good
neurological outcome; that piglets treated with the drug suffered less
neurodegeneration; and that the drug is effective in preventing general
and systemic bleeding, reducing by half both bleeding time in mice and
bleeding volume in rats.
In the future, this drug product will also be
used to treat other bleeding disorders, such as traumatic brain injury,
general injuries, bleeding due to surgery, and post-birth hemorrhage,
Higazi said.
“The next challenge will be to transfer this
drug from the research labs into a product that is stable and can be
manufactured in commercial amounts in an efficient way,” Dr. Amos Ofer,
the CEO of the company said. “We also need to set out a timeframe and
plans for the clinical trials which we hope to start in 2019.”
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