Ontak received FDA Advisory Panel backing.  The stock (SRGN) over-reacted, to 0.80, before falling back to 0.62, or so.  Based on the LGND deal, SRGN is worth around 0.70, IMO (without even factoring in LGND's substantial discount to fair value, and discounting the 0.23 payment by 10% for the one year, or so, time lag.) 
      Seragen Wins FDA Panel Backing for Ontak Cancer Drug (Update1) 
      Bloomberg News     June 2, 1998, 9:32 a.m. PT 
      Seragen Wins FDA Panel Backing for Ontak Cancer Drug (Update1)
      (Adds panel action)
      Gaithersburg, Maryland, June 2 (Bloomberg) -- Seragen Inc.'s     Ontak drug won the backing of an expert government panel for     fighting a rare cancer in patients who otherwise would have few     options for battling the disease.
      In two unanimous votes, the U.S. Food and Drug     Administration advisory panel decided the drug is safe and     effective and should be cleared for sale to treat patients with     an unusual cancer known as cutaneous T-cell lymphoma.
      The drug is ''truly a miracle,'' said William Smith, a     patient from Hingham, Massachusetts.
      Hopkinton, Massachusetts-based Seragen originally developed     the drug with Eli Lilly & Co. Last month, however, Ligand     Pharmaceuticals Inc. said it planned to buy Seragen and to     acquire Lilly's rights to Ontak.
      Seragen shares were unchanged at 54 cents in recent trading,     while shares of San Diego-based Ligand fell 7/16 to 13 5/16.
      The panel is still deciding what further studies will be     needed to determine how the drug best can be used and at what     dosages.
      Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma is a very rare and ultimately     fatal condition. Still, it's slow growing, and most patients live     at least 10 years after diagnosis.
      Cancer experts today presented studies that showed about 30     percent of the 71 patients who got the drug had at least a     partial response in which the disease and symptoms improved. All     evidence of the disease disappeared in 10 percent of the     patients, the studies showed.
      Side Effects
      Most patients had side effects ranging from infection to     fever and chills. A significant number of patients also had     cardiovascular problems after getting the drug. The company said     it was difficult to assess which of the side effects were solely     due to the drug, and not from the disease itself.
      In addition to improving a patient's health, the drug     improved symptoms of the disease, very important in this     particular cancer, experts said today.
      ''All except a few relapsing patients showed improvement     (and) had a significant improvement in their quality of life,''     after being treated with the drug, said Madeleine Duvic, a cancer     doctor from the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, who participated in     the company's study and presented data on the drug's     effectiveness.
      The T-cell lymphomas begin as small plaques of tough, scaly     patches and gradually spread over the skin. The brownish-black     plaques -- which can grow to cover the majority of a patient's     face and body -- are disfiguring, itch and are prone to     infection. If left untreated, the topical cancer will develop     into tumors, and finally seep into the organ systems and spread     throughout the body.
      Experts today showed slides of patients whose faces and     bodies had been obscured by the disease and told of one woman who     said her daughter had been afraid of her until the drug shrank     and healed the facial plaques.
      While the disease is slow moving, it accelerates in advanced     forms and those who are diagnosed after the lymphoma has reached     their organs generally live less than two years. The company is     asking for clearance to sell the drug to treat patients who have     more advanced disease and who have already failed other     treatments.
      Currently, some patients have their bodies coated with toxic     mustard treatments, have either their skin or their blood     radiated, or undergo harsh chemotherapy regimens. These     treatments are time consuming, and are extremely toxic to the     skin, leading to lesions, further scarring and even other forms     of skin cancers.
      Ontak is a form of a natural immune system compound called     Interleukin-2 which is merged with the toxin from diphtheria. It     is produced by genetically engineered e.coli bacteria. The     company said it is still in studies to determine just what doses     work best in patients.
      Later this morning the panel will hear the FDA's     interpretation of the data, and then make a recommendation. This     afternoon, the cancer advisory committee with consider whether to     recommend SmithKline-Beecham's Hycamtin drug for patients with     lung cancer.
      --Kristin Reed in Gaithersburg, Maryland with reporting from 
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