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Article:
Orphan Drugs: Hope Where There Is Little or No
Hope
By Alex Michelini
NEW YORK, N.Y., February 18, 2004 On a visit to his doctor,
Gary Jacob received distressing news not about himself, but
a friend of the doctor's.
While playing with one of his children, the doctors friend
fell and broke a rib. That was bad enough, but during the examination
at the hospital, the father was hit with a startling and totally
unexpected diagnosis he had a disease known as multiple myeloma,
a bone marrow blood cancer.
The diagnosis was nothing less than a death sentence.
Jacob knew of the anguish of multiple myeloma patients. The disease
is incurable and nearly always fatal, one of the rare diseases that
have few, if any, available treatments. They are known as "orphan"
diseases, shunned by most drug-makers because the patient populations
are small and commercial development of a drug is seen as economically
unattractive.
Mr. Jacob was aware because, as Chief Executive Officer of Callisto
Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a small Manhattan-based biopharmaceutical
company, he is leading a scientific effort to develop a new orphan
drug called "Atiprimod" for multiple myeloma patients.
"The father's disease brought home to me that what we are
doing is really important," says Mr. Jacob. "Everyone
agrees we need more drugs to treat multiple myeloma. There are people
out there dying without real hope because of a lack of effective
treatment for all patients."
In steadily increasing numbers, orphan drugs are providing new
doses of hope where little or none at all existed. In the decade
before the inception of the federal Food and Drug Administration's
orphan drug program, 10 drugs were developed by pharmaceutical companies
for orphan diseases. In the decades since, the FDA says nearly 250
new drugs were developed and approved, and hundreds more are in
the pipeline.
Atiprimod is one of those wending its way toward the marketplace.
Callisto recently obtained orphan drug designation from the FDA,
providing the company with financial incentives to continue the
costly development process.
The program covers drugs for orphan diseases with patient populations
under 200,000.
The National Organization for Rare Disorders reports about 25 million
people in the United States suffer from an estimated 6,000 orphan
diseases.
Diseases such as cystic fibrosis, complications affecting HIV-infected
people, Gaucher's disease, hemophilia and rare forms of cancer were
among the orphans without effective medicines until the FDA program
went into effect in 1983 and paved the way for new drugs for patients
with these diseases.
Large drug-makers have been largely missing from the efforts.
According to the orphan drug program's deputy director, Dr. John
McCormick, only 15% of applications for orphan drug designation
have come from the larger pharmaceutical companies.
The reason: expectations of unfavorable investment returns.
The FDA orphan drug incentives grants, seven years of marketing
exclusivity and tax breaks have drawn small pharmaceutical
companies with promising drug candidates into the breach.
While the future is brighter, the task is still daunting to develop
drugs for orphan diseases.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig's disease, affects
30,000 Americans with 8,000 new cases diagnosed annually; Huntington's
disease also affects about 30,000 patients.
Some diseases affect fewer than 100 patients, according to the
National Institutes of Health.
An estimated 50,000 patients have multiple myeloma with 15,000
new patients diagnosed each year. Last year, the FDA approved a
new drug Velcade for patients with the disease. However, there are
still a number of multiple myeloma patients with no treatment available.
Dr. Kenneth C. Anderson, who played a major role in the preclinical
development and clinical trials of Velcade and is now a member of
Callisto's Medical Advisory Board, is among the experts who see
a need for more drugs to treat multiple myeloma.
"He is excited to see Atiprimod enter clinical trials for
evaluation in multiple myeloma patients," Jacob said of Anderson.
"He believes it has an opportunity to help patients who have
not responded to other drugs. "
Dr. Anderson is director of the Jerome Lipper Multiple Myeloma
Center of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, MA, and Professor
of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.
The Phase I/IIa trials for Atiprimod are slated to begin later
this month.
Dr. Donald Picker, Callisto's Senior Vice President of Drug Development,
said studies of Atiprimod in collaboration with scientists at the
National Cancer Institute have been very promising.
"In essence, we've shown in these early studies that Atiprimod
has the potential to intervene with cancer cells and tumors in three
ways by inhibiting their formation, by programming their
death and by limiting their ability to grow blood vessels necessary
for their survival. Taken together, these findings suggest that
Atiprimod could potentially represent a novel class of compounds
for development for therapeutic intervention in human cancers,"
said Dr. Picker.
About The Author
Alex Michelini is a former award-winning reporter/editor at the
New York Daily News. His credits include nomination for a Pulitzer
Prize for a series on medical costs. Among his honors, Mr. Michelini
received the Deadline Club Award, the Page One Award, the Associated
Press Award and the New York Press Club Award (twice). He is the
founder of Alex Michelini Public Relations, and has developed and
collaborated on articles appearing in the New York Times, the Wall
Street Journal, the London Times, the New York Post, the New York
Daily News, Bloomberg Radio & TV, CNNfn, WCBS Radio & TV.
WINS radio, the Christian Science Monitor, Fox TV, Reuters, Newsday
and other media outlets.
michelinialex@aol.com
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