Come one, everybody WAKE UP ! Here's an anouncement and people expect them to announce eight (8) more tests in the next year:
Myriad to Launch First Genetic Test for High Blood Pressure
PR Newswire, Thursday, November 13, 1997 at 11:10
Test to Identify Patients Who May Benefit Most From a Salt-Restricted Diet And Who are Likely to Progress to a More Severe Form of Hypertension
SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 13 /PRNewswire/ -- Myriad Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:MYGN), plans to launch a test to identify patients with hypertension (high blood pressure) who have a genetic variant that makes them particularly sensitive to sodium (salt) consumption and who are prone to complications such as heart disease, kidney failure and stroke, the company announced today. The importance of the test, called CardiaRisk(TM), was further highlighted based on data presented on Tuesday at the 70th Annual Meeting of the American Heart Association by Dr. Steven Hunt, of the University of Utah's Cardiovascular Genetics Research Clinic, working in collaboration with the National Institutes of Health. Myriad Genetics performed the testing on all 1,509 study participants using its CardiaRisk(TM) genetic test. The study, part of a large multi-center trial of hypertension prevention, indicates that participants with the genetic variant had a 42 percent higher incidence of hypertension over the three-year study period. Only the participants with the genetic variant benefited from a low-salt diet. About 20 percent of the participants in the study carried the genetic defect. By using the results of Myriad's test to detect this mutation, physicians can identify those individuals likely to benefit significantly from a salt restrictive diet and those for whom it may not be worth the inconvenience and effort. About 50 million individuals have high blood pressure in the United States. Sodium restriction is a common lifestyle modification recommended by physicians for all hypertensive patients along with weight loss, if indicated, and increased exercise. Physicians have long known, however, that many patients do not respond to salt reduction and that compliance is complicated by the practical difficulty of preparing and eating low-salt foods, especially since salt is common in most pre-packaged and processed foods. Effective treatment of hypertension has the intent of preventing stroke, heart disease, renal failure and premature death. Based on other studies, CardiaRisk(TM) is also believed to identify those hypertensive patients who have a greater risk for heart attacks (3.4-fold increased risk) and renal failure (two-fold increased risk). Since the individuals with the genetic variant are more likely to progress to a more severe form of hypertension, physicians are likely to provide closer follow up, recommend low sodium diet therapy and encourage earlier and more aggressive therapy to slow disease progression. "We expect the CardiaRisk(TM) test to have significant clinical utility in the diagnosis, treatment, and management of hypertensive patients ," commented Peter Meldrum, Myriad President and CEO. "We plan to make the test available to physicians in early 1998 and will price it to encourage broad use. In addition, the test should reduce medical expenditures by focusing resources on the minority of patients at greater risk of heart attacks and kidney failure related to hypertension." Other studies have shown that individuals with the genetic variant at the -6 position in the AGT promoter region (AA genotype) produced higher levels of angiotensinogen than those with the GG genotype. Angiotensinogen through several enzymatic cleavages is converted to angiotensin II, a peptide hormone that regulates vascular resistance and sodium homeostasis, and thus is important for determining blood pressure. Those individuals with the AA genotype had a higher 3-year incidence of hypertension (44.6 percent) compared to the GG genotype (31.5 percent). Since mutations in the AGT gene have been associated with salt-sensitive hypertension and a corresponding increase in blood pressure, the study also analyzed the incidence of hypertension following low sodium diet therapy. According to the study of borderline hypertensive patients, only the AA genotype individuals experienced a statistically significant lowering of blood pressure after reducing their salt intake for three years. Individuals with the AA genotype experienced a net decrease in diastolic blood pressure of - 2.27 mm Hg as compared to individuals with the GG genotype, which actually saw an average increase in diastolic blood pressure of +1.07 mm Hg compared to controls with no dietary-salt intervention. Myriad Genetics, Inc., based in Salt Lake City, is a genomics and genetic testing company focused on the discovery and commercialization of genes involved in major common disorders, including cancer, cardiovascular disease, metabolic and respiratory diseases, and central nervous system disorders. The Company is involved in strategic alliances with Schering-Plough, Novartis, Bayer and Eli Lilly. Myriad's news releases are available on the Company's web site at www.myriad.com. The discussion in this news release includes forward-looking statements based upon management's current expectations. Factors that could cause future results to differ materially from such expectations include: intense competition related to the discovery of disease-related genes; the Company's limited marketing and sales experience and the risk that CardiaRisk(TM) and other tests which the Company may develop may not be marketed at acceptable prices or receive commercial acceptance in the near future, if at all; uncertainty as to whether there will exist adequate reimbursement for the Company's service from the government, private healthcare insurers and third- party payers; and uncertainties as to the extent of future government regulation of the Company's business.
SOURCE Myriad Genetics, Inc. -0- 11/13/97 /CONTACT: William A. Hockett, Director of Corporate Communications of Myriad Genetics, Inc., 801-584-3600/ |