Product pipeline atherogenics.com
AGI-1067 AGI-1067, our lead v-protectant product candidate, is a small molecule that is orally dosed once per day. In pre-clinical testing, AGI-1067 has shown the following three biological properties that we believe will benefit patients with atherosclerosis:
AGI-1067 blocks expression of VCAM-1. We believe that decreased VCAM-1 expression will diminish atherosclerosis and restenosis.
AGI-1067 is a potent anti-oxidant.
AGI-1067 protects LDL cholesterol from converting into a harmful inflammatory agent.
AGI-1067 lowers LDL cholesterol. LDL cholesterol lowering reduces the risk of developing atherosclerosis
According to the American College of Cardiology, more than seven million people in the United States have coronary artery disease, including 1.5 million who have heart attacks every year. In order to make a definitive diagnosis in patients with suspected coronary artery disease, a specially trained cardiologist or radiologist performs a diagnostic procedure called angiography in which dye is injected through an intravenous catheter to image the coronary arteries. Angiography can reveal coronary artery disease that may require an invasive procedure. For more than one million patients annually in North America, this invasive therapeutic intervention takes the form of angioplasty. This procedure consists of placing a balloon-tipped catheter into the coronary artery and mechanically re-opening the blood vessel by expanding the balloon under very high pressure. In addition, cardiologists may opt to treat some of these coronary artery blockages by inserting a small cylindrical mesh device, called a stent, to keep the blood vessel open after the catheter is removed.
Angioplasty does not cure coronary artery disease, nor does it treat the underlying chronic inflammation. In fact, angioplasty induces an inflammatory response that contributes to its failure in approximately 30% of patients who undergo the procedure. This process of re-narrowing, or post-angioplasty restenosis, is a major clinical problem that limits the effectiveness of the procedure. Restenosis following balloon angioplasty occurs due to coronary artery and endothelial cell damage. The development of stents and the ongoing research and development activities with respect to catheter improvement have not eradicated the problem of restenosis, but have introduced the new problem of in-stent restenosis which is particularly difficult to treat. In-stent restenosis occurs when the cells that surround the stent proliferate and fill the opening of the vessel.
Our initial development target is post-angioplasty restenosis. More significantly, we believe that AGI-1067 may treat all areas of the coronary artery susceptible to atherosclerosis in a way that cannot be achieved with any existing therapy.
We have completed pre-clinical testing in multiple species to establish the therapeutic properties of AGI-1067. Dosed orally, AGI-1067 blocked VCAM-1 expression, prevented atherosclerosis and showed potent anti-oxidant activity. In addition, AGI-1067 reduced LDL-cholesterol comparably to and in combination with statins, which are widely used cholesterol lowering drugs.
Based upon our successful completion of pre-clinical testing, we studied AGI-1067 in seven Phase I clinical trials in more than 150 men and women, including healthy volunteers and patients up to the age of 85 to assess tolerability and potential for interaction with other drugs. In addition, we have given AGI-1067 in combination with other drug classes commonly used in patients with atherosclerosis. In these clinical trials, six of which we conducted under the Investigational New Drug Application for cholesterol lowering, the subjects tolerated AGI-1067 well, with no dose or use-limiting side effects. These positive results supported our progress to Phase II clinical trials.
We are presently conducting a Phase II clinical trial in Canada to assess the tolerability and efficacy of AGI-1067 as an agent to prevent post-angioplasty restenosis. We opened our Canadian Investigational New Drug Application in April 1999 for AGI-1067 as an agent to prevent post-angioplasty restenosis. The Canadian Antioxidant Restenosis Trial, called CART-1, is a multi-center, randomized, double-blind, safety and efficacy dose-ranging study, comparing AGI-1067 with placebo and an active control in patients with established coronary artery disease who undergo elective angioplasty. We plan to dose 315 patients for six weeks and follow them for a total of six months. During angiography performed six months after angioplasty, we will assess the efficacy of AGI-1067 by measuring directly the diameter of the opening of the treated coronary artery. We enrolled the first patient in CART-1 on September 2, 1999 and the trial is ongoing at four Canadian centers of excellence in interventional cardiology. An independent data and safety monitoring board reviews patient data periodically to ensure the continued safety of enrolled patients.
We have formed a joint management committee with Schering-Plough to oversee all aspects of development and commercialization of AGI-1067. The committee consists of equal numbers of AtheroGenics and Schering-Plough representatives. Under direction of the joint management committee, we expect to manage further clinical, pre-clinical and chemical development work for AGI-1067.
AGI-Series for Respiratory Diseases We are developing an intravenously-dosed, small molecule v-protectant to treat exacerbations of cystic fibrosis. Based on positive clinical trial results, we will evaluate our v-protectant for the treatment of patients hospitalized with exacerbations of asthma. For patients with chronic respiratory diseases, including cystic fibrosis and asthma, an exacerbation is a sudden worsening of the patient's breathing that usually requires hospitalization and intensive therapy.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, asthma afflicts more than 17 million adults and children in the United States. From 1980 to 1994, the prevalence of this disease increased by over 75%. Asthma morbidity and mortality continue to rise in spite of massive public health efforts. In 1998, the combined direct and indirect costs of asthma in the United States was $9.8 billion. Current therapies that target the underlying disease include corticosteroids and several classes of drugs that relieve symptoms but are not effective for chronic inflammation. None of these drugs, including inhaled corticosteroids, is particularly effective for treating exacerbation of asthma which remains a major unmet medical problem. We believe that v-protectants may reduce the inflammation associated with the acute exacerbation of asthma and may be useful in the treatment of up to 1.8 million patients annually who develop acute exacerbations of asthma and seek emergency room treatment in the United States.
Cystic fibrosis is a common hereditary disease among Caucasians. According to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, there are 36,000 children and adults with cystic fibrosis in the United States. Approximately 25% of patients with cystic fibrosis are hospitalized at least once per year. Physicians treat exacerbations of cystic fibrosis with antibiotics that treat the associated chronic bacterial infection of the lungs. These antibiotics, however, do not address the chronic inflammation that underlies cystic fibrosis. Physicians no longer use corticosteroids routinely to treat exacerbations because they compromise the patient's immune response to bacterial infection. We believe that v-protectants can treat this chronic inflammation without compromising the necessary immune response to bacteria.
We have identified small molecule, v-protectant product candidates from among five AGI-series of compounds for intravenous administration to hospitalized patients with respiratory diseases. We are evaluating these small molecules based on development criteria such as potency, stability and ease of formulation. We will use these criteria to choose a lead product candidate for clinical development that targets one or more respiratory disease indications. We plan to apply to the FDA for fast track status for this product candidate as a treatment for exacerbations of cystic fibrosis. We have observed a decrease in lung inflammation in a pre-clinical model of asthma using a compound discovered in this effort.
AGI-Series for Rheumatoid Arthritis We are developing an orally-dosed, small molecule v-protectant to treat patients with chronic rheumatoid arthritis who have not responded to maximum current therapy. For patients with rheumatoid arthritis, chronic therapy progresses from pain relievers to increasingly toxic immunosuppressants, called disease modifiers. Based on positive clinical trial results, we will evaluate our v-protectant for the treatment of patients who are receiving moderate disease modifying therapy.
Rheumatoid arthritis is a common auto-immune disease which affects joints and arterial blood vessels. According to the Arthritis Foundation, there are 2.1 million people with rheumatoid arthritis in the United States. Rheumatoid arthritis and related diseases cost the U.S. economy more than $65 billion annually in direct and indirect costs. Approximately 70% of patients with rheumatoid arthritis are young and middle-aged women. Physicians treat rheumatoid arthritis with pain relievers including aspirin and other non- steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and proceed in resistant patients to treatment with low doses of corticosteroids and immunosuppressants. The recent successful introduction of new drugs, including Celebrex, Enbrel and Vioxx, has highlighted both the market potential and the size and scope of the unmet medical need of these patients. These drugs are partially effective but either increase the risk of infection or do not address the chronic vascular inflammation that marks rheumatoid arthritis.We believe that v-protectants can treat the chronic inflammation of rheumatoid arthritis including the direct inflammation of the arteries, without increasing the patient's risk for infection.
We have identified small molecule, v-protectant product candidates from among five AGI-series of compounds for oral administration to rheumatoid arthritis patients who have not responded to therapy. We are evaluating these small molecules based on development criteria such as potency, stability and ease of formulation.
AGI-Series for Post-Transplant Late and Chronic Solid Organ Rejection We are developing an orally-dosed, small molecule v-protectant to treat late solid organ transplant rejection. Patients' immune systems recognize transplanted organs as foreign and therefore reject them. Physicians treat these patients with powerful immuno-suppressants to block all immune and inflammatory reactions that could cause acute solid organ rejection. These therapies place patients at risk for life threatening infection. As the body adapts to the transplanted organ, physicians modify therapy gradually to reduce the likelihood of infection. During the first year, approximately 25% of patients who receive solid organ transplants develop a delayed sudden transplant rejection, which is called late solid organ transplant rejection. We believe that v-protectants will extend protection to the transplanted organ without increasing the patient's risk for infection.
Those patients who do not reject the transplanted organ within the first year remain at risk indefinitely to reject the transplanted solid organ. This chronic inflammatory process is called chronic solid organ transplant rejection. The vascular protection provided by our product candidates may protect solid organs from rejection beyond the first year without increasing the risk of infection. No other solid organ anti-rejection drug in development has this profile.
According to the American Society of Transplantation, there are approximately 30,000 heart, kidney and liver transplant recipients per year in the United States. Of these, 7,000 develop late transplant rejection. There are 200,000 organ transplant recipients in the United States who are at risk of chronic transplant rejection. Chronic rejection is a major factor contributing to organ shortage.
We have identified small molecule, v-protectant product candidates from among five AGI-series of compounds for oral administration to patients who have received transplants. We are evaluating these small molecules based on development criteria such as potency, stability and ease of formulation. We will use these criteria to choose a lead product candidate for clinical development that targets late solid organ transplant rejection. We plan to apply to the FDA for fast track status for this product candidate as an adjunct to current transplant therapy, which includes immunosuppressant and anti-inflammatory drugs. Based on positive results, we will seek to expand the indication into protection from chronic solid organ transplant rejection.
Diagnostic Assay Program Based on our v-protectant technology platform, we have designed a simple and proprietary blood test that measures a circulating blood marker for atherosclerosis. We plan to conduct tests on human blood samples to establish whether this new marker, called Oxykine, is an accurate and useful diagnostic tool. We believe Oxykine will allow physicians to determine whether a patient has active and progressive atherosclerosis and whether the disease is responding to medical therapy. There are currently no diagnostic tools that meet this critical need in atherosclerosis disease management. |