Cardium Reports on New Excellarate(TM) Product Formulations to Expand Commercialization Potential Into Multiple Wound Healing Ap
May 07 2009 - 9:00AM
PR Newswire (US)
SAN DIEGO, May 7 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Cardium Therapeutics
(NYSE Amex: CXM) and its subsidiary Tissue Repair Company (TRC)
today announced significant new formulation enhancements for its
Excellarate(TM) product candidate that are designed to simplify and
broaden the use of Excellarate for diabetic ulcers, and also expand
the potential applicability into a number of additional wound
healing market opportunities, including pressure and venous stasis
ulcers, as well as major surgical and serious trauma wounds. (Logo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20051018/CARDIUMLOGO) To learn
more about the Excellarate product candidate and the MATRIX
clinical study click here (or visit Cardium's website at
http://www.cardiumthx.com/). The television segment features an
investigator of the study, Dr. Vickie Driver, D.P.M., Director of
Research, Foot Care, Department of Surgery at Boston Medical
University and Medical Center, and a patient enrolled in the study.
Excellarate is a collagen-based topical gel employing TRC's Gene
Activated Matrix(TM) (GAM) technology to stimulate a patient's
cells to produce a sustained micro-release of platelet-derived
growth factor-B (PDGF-B) protein directly within the patient's
wound where it is needed. PDGF-B is believed to stimulate
angiogenesis and granulation tissue formation through the
recruitment and proliferation of cells such as monocytes,
fibroblasts and endothelial cells, which are critical for the
effective stimulation of a variety of wound healing processes. On
May 6, 2009, Cardium announced the completion of recruitment for
the Phase 2b MATRIX clinical trial to evaluate the safety and
efficacy of Excellarate for the treatment of non-healing diabetic
foot ulcers. The MATRIX Data and Safety Monitoring Board has
reviewed safety data collected from study participants as of April
21, 2009 and reported that Excellarate appears to be both safe and
well tolerated, with no serious adverse events attributable to the
study product. Approximately 70% of the patients recruited in the
MATRIX study have already completed their initial evaluation period
with respect to key efficacy criteria, particularly the percentage
of patients achieving complete wound closure, the rate of wound
closure and the reduction of wound size at various time points.
With confirmation of one or more medically meaningful responses,
Cardium and TRC would expect to meet with the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) to review the complete safety and efficacy
database from this Phase 2b clinical study and their plans for
initiating a larger-scale Phase 3 pivotal study. New
Excellarate(TM) Product Formulations for Expanded Applications In
parallel with the Phase 2b study and in anticipation of a Phase 3
clinical study and future commercialization, the Company's
continuing process development activities have led to an important
breakthrough in product formulation that not only significantly
simplifies the use of Excellarate, but opens the door to additional
potential applications of the Excellarate technology in a number of
other wound healing market opportunities. The product formulation
that was used in the Phase 2b study required storage in a -70
degrees Celsius freezer and a two syringe mixing process prior to
treatment. The new product formulation is designed to be maintained
in a physician's office using a standard refrigerator (at a
temperature of about 4 degrees Celsius) and to have a shelf life of
12-18 months. It will also be formulated as an easy-to-use single
syringe that is pre-mixed and ready to be applied to patients'
wounds. With these product formulation enhancements and the
accumulating data on Excellarate, Cardium is now focused on
establishing additional cost-effective therapeutics that carry the
potential to extend well beyond the initial indication of
non-healing diabetic foot ulcers. In addition to the single syringe
refrigerated formulation to facilitate storage and ease-of-use,
Cardium and its manufacturing partners are developing low-cost and
efficient large-scale production processes for DNA-based
therapeutics using bioreactors with high cell densities and
high-titer productivities. The relatively low dosing requirements
for this new class of product candidates is enabled by TRC's GAM
technology which causes the protein to be produced by a patient's
own cells for a sustained period of time and locally released where
it is needed within the wound site. The low dosing requirements
relative to protein-based therapeutics, combined with the much
lower costs of DNA-based product manufacturing, creates the
potential for a new class of highly effective low cost therapeutics
for application in a number of different tissue repair and wound
treatment settings. The Excellarate product candidate is initially
being developed to facilitate wound closure in non-healing diabetic
foot ulcers, which affect about 15% of the 24 million diabetic
patients in the United States or about 3.6 million patients. The
ability to achieve closure of chronic, non-healing wounds following
application of a simple topical gel is considered to be
particularly important for patient populations with chronic
diseases such as diabetes. Available advanced wound care products
for these patients have a number of limitations such as requiring a
regimen of repeated wound cleanings and product re-administrations,
or multiple trips to a treatment center, or custom produced and
expensive skin substitute products. In addition, many patients,
including approximately one in seven participants in the MATRIX
clinical study, have wounds that do not close even after treatments
with what are regarded as the most advanced wound care therapies
currently available (i.e., repeat-administration therapies using
Becaplermin protein [Regranex(R)] or negative pressure pumps, or
"living-skin" equivalents). With the new product formulation
enhancements and the accumulating data on Excellarate, this
technology has the potential to be developed into additional
cost-effective therapeutics with expanded clinical utility. The
broader fields of wound healing and tissue repair involve an order
of magnitude more patients than those with diabetic ulcers, and
these other fields are likewise in need of innovative products.
There are a number of key market drivers behind the growth in
advanced wound care products. Non-healing or slow healing wounds in
patients are highly susceptible to becoming infected, both in
hospital and out. Furthermore, the use of antibiotics in these
patients has resulted in the outgrowth of antibiotic resistant
pathogens. Most importantly for patients and their physicians,
wounds that have become infected can lead to amputations, a result
that is often associated with a dramatic increase in mortality even
in societies with optimal medical care. In the United States, for
example, non-healing ulcers among diabetic patients are the leading
cause of amputation, and even with care approximately half of such
patients die within three years of their amputation. These emerging
trends and growing market demand are evidenced by the recent
success of negative pressure wound therapy products, such as those
marketed and sold in the United States by Kinetics Concepts Inc.
and Smith & Nephew, which represent the first $1.0 billion
product segment in the wound care market. Based on these trends and
needs, wound healing agents designed to accelerate the rate of
wound healing are expected to play a more prominent role in the
future of advanced wound care. As reported by MedTech Insight, the
wound care market is projected to experience double digit growth
over the next 3 to 5 years, with advanced wound care products
comprising the fastest growing segment of the total wound care
market. There are an estimated 91.3 million wounds in the U.S.,
which include 67.0 million surgical wounds, 17.6 million trauma
wounds including burn injuries, amputations and traumatic wounds,
2.5 million pressure ulcers, 3.6 million diabetic ulcers and 3.3
million venous stasis and arterial ulcers. The ability to
effectively address even a small proportion of these wounds would
represent major new market opportunities for application of Tissue
Repair's GAM technology. About Cardium Cardium Therapeutics, Inc.
and its subsidiaries, InnerCool Therapies, Inc. and the Tissue
Repair Company, are medical technology companies primarily focused
on the development, manufacture and sale of innovative therapeutic
products and devices for cardiovascular, ischemic and related
indications. Cardium's InnerCool Therapies subsidiary is a San
Diego-based medical technology company in the emerging field of
temperature modulation therapy to rapidly and controllably cool the
body in order to reduce cell death and damage following acute
ischemic events such as cardiac arrest or stroke, and to
potentially lessen or prevent associated injuries such as adverse
neurological outcomes. For more information about Cardium's
InnerCool subsidiary and patient temperature modulation, including
InnerCool's new RapidBlue(TM) System, which recently received FDA
clearance, and its CoolBlue(TM) System, please visit
http://www.innercool.com/. Cardium also has two biologic candidates
in clinical development. Cardium's Tissue Repair Company subsidiary
(TRC) is focused on the development of growth factor therapeutics
for the treatment of severe chronic diabetic wounds. TRC's lead
product candidate, Excellarate(TM), is a DNA-activated collagen gel
for topical treatment formulated with an adenovector delivery
carrier encoding human platelet-derived growth factor-B (PDGF-B).
Excellarate(TM) is initially being developed to be administered
once or twice for the potential treatment of non-healing diabetic
foot ulcers. Other potential applications for TRC's Gene Activated
Matrix(TM) (GAM) technology include therapeutic angiogenesis
(cardiovascular ischemia, peripheral arterial disease) and
orthopedic products, including hard tissue (bone) and soft tissue
(ligament, tendon, cartilage) repair. GAM technology can also be
applied to a number of other approaches benefiting from sustained
localized release of therapeutic proteins and other agents. For
more information about Cardium's Tissue Repair Company subsidiary,
please visit http://www.t-r-co.com/. Cardium's Generx product
candidate (alferminogene tadenovec, Ad5FGF-4) is a DNA-based growth
factor therapeutic designed for use by interventional cardiologists
as a potential one-time treatment to promote and stimulate the
growth of collateral circulation in the hearts of patients with
ischemic conditions such as recurrent angina. For more information
about Cardium Therapeutics and its businesses, products and
therapeutic candidates, please visit http://www.cardiumthx.com/ or
view its most recent annual report on Form 10-K and other reports
as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and available
on the company's website. Forward-Looking Statements Except for
statements of historical fact, the matters discussed in this press
release are forward looking and reflect numerous assumptions and
involve a variety of risks and uncertainties, many of which are
beyond our control and may cause actual results to differ
materially from stated expectations. For example, there can be no
assurance that the MATRIX study or other human clinical trials can
be conducted and completed in an efficient and successful manner,
that product formulation enhancements will be successful or will
effectively simplify or expand the use of product candidates or
technologies, that the GAM technology can be successfully broadened
or applied to additional wound healing or tissue repair
opportunities, that Excellarate or our other candidates will prove
to be sufficiently safe and effective, that results or trends
observed in one clinical study or procedure will be reproduced in
subsequent studies or procedures, that clinical studies even if
successful will lead to product advancement or partnering, that our
products or product candidates will not be unfavorably compared to
competitive products that may be regarded as safer, more effective,
easier to use or less expensive, that FDA, CE Mark or other
regulatory clearances or UL or other certifications, or partnering
or other distribution agreements or other commercialization efforts
will be successful or will effectively accelerate the business or
market, that product modifications or launches will be successful
or that the resulting products will be favorably received in the
marketplace, that our products or product candidates will prove to
be sufficiently safe and effective after introduction into a
broader patient population, or that third parties on whom we depend
will perform as anticipated. Actual results may also differ
substantially from those described in or contemplated by this press
release due to risks and uncertainties that exist in our operations
and business environment, including, without limitation, risks and
uncertainties that are inherent in the development of complex
biologics and therapeutic hypothermia devices and in the conduct of
human clinical trials, including the timing, costs and outcomes of
such trials, our ability to obtain necessary funding, regulatory
approvals and expected qualifications, our ability to successfully
accelerate the commercialization of our therapeutic hypothermia
devices and launch new devices within the timeframes contemplated,
our dependence upon proprietary technology, our history of
operating losses and accumulated deficits, our reliance on
collaborative relationships and critical personnel, and current and
future competition, as well as other risks described from time to
time in filings we make with the Securities and Exchange
Commission. We undertake no obligation to release publicly the
results of any revisions to these forward-looking statements to
reflect events or circumstances arising after the date hereof.
Copyright 2009 Cardium Therapeutics, Inc. All rights reserved. For
Terms of Use Privacy Policy, please visit
http://www.cardiumthx.com/. Cardium Therapeutics(TM) and Generx(R)
are trademarks of CardiumTherapeutics, Inc. Tissue Repair(TM), Gene
Activated Matrix(TM), GAM(TM), and Excellarate(TM) are trademarks
of Tissue Repair Company. InnerCool Therapies(R), InnerCool(R),
RapidBlue(TM) and CoolBlue(TM) are trademarks of InnerCool
Therapies, Inc. Other trademarks are the property of their
respective owners.
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20051018/CARDIUMLOGO
http://photoarchive.ap.org/ DATASOURCE: Cardium Therapeutics
CONTACT: Bonnie Ortega, Director, Investor/Public Relations,
Cardium Therapeutics, Inc., +1-858-436-1018 , Web Site:
http://www.cardiumthx.com/
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