Wilder,
AGIX' situation continues to look interesting. I gather you never got anyone to take an informed whack at these results:
>>ATLANTA, May 21 /PRNewswire/ -- AtheroGenics, Inc. (Nasdaq: AGIX - news), an emerging pharmaceutical company focused on the treatment of chronic inflammatory diseases, today announced encouraging preliminary results of a Phase II clinical trial of AGI-1067, an oral agent for the treatment of restenosis after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), a procedure commonly known as ``angioplasty.''
An analysis of the results indicated that six months after angioplasty, the blood vessels of patients who received AGI-1067 had greater luminal diameters of their coronary arteries than those patients who received placebo. This improvement showed a statistically significant dose response. At the highest dose of AGI-1067, the increase in the size of the target blood vessel was similar to that achieved with probucol, the active control drug in CART-1 (Canadian Antioxidant Restenosis Trial), which has been shown in previous clinical studies to reduce restenosis rates significantly following angioplasty without stent deployment.
An unexpected apparent benefit of drug treatment affected the use of the method typically specified for analyzing primary endpoint in a restenosis study. Because of this apparent early drug benefit on coronary arteries, AtheroGenics has not yet determined whether CART-1 met its primary statistical endpoint as pre-specified in the protocol. A full analysis of the safety and efficacy data is underway and expected to be announced later this year.
There were no deaths or increase in the incidence of serious adverse events when comparing AGI-1067 to placebo. In CART-1, an important safety issue was whether AGI-1067 would cause a prolongation of the QTc interval, which is an electrophysiological abnormality of the heart. The study showed that AGI-1067 did not cause QTc prolongation. Conversely, probucol did cause QTc prolongation in a statistically significant proportion of patients.
``CART-1 results confirm and extend the findings from the MVP clinical study of probucol for the treatment of restenosis, which were published in the New England Journal of Medicine,'' said Jean-Claude Tardif, M.D., FRCPC, Director of Clinical Research at the Montreal Heart Institute and Principal Investigator of CART-1. ``In CART-1, AGI-1067 appears to exhibit the benefit of probucol therapy without the potential shortcomings associated with QTc prolongation.''
This multi-center, randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled study, known as CART-1, comprised 305 men and women who were treated by angioplasty, with or without intracoronary stenting. The study was conducted at five clinical sites in Canada, led by the Montreal Heart Institute and included four other major cardiovascular teaching hospitals. Prior to angioplasty, patients were randomized to one of five treatment arms: AGI-1067 doses of either 70 mg, 140 mg or 280 mg, once daily, probucol 500 mg twice daily or placebo.
``This clinical study represents an important achievement in AtheroGenics' clinical development program,'' said Russell M. Medford, M.D., Ph.D., President and Chief Executive Officer of AtheroGenics. ``We are all very excited about these statistically significant results, which are the first demonstration of biological activity of AGI-1067 in patients.''
CART-1 study investigators have submitted abstracts for presentation at the American Heart Association meeting in November 2001.
Schering-Plough Corporation has exclusive worldwide rights to develop and commercialize AGI-1067 and is funding all development and commercialization costs. Under the license agreement, AtheroGenics receives upfront and milestone payments totaling as much as $189 million, plus royalties on sales of any approved product covered by the license agreement.
To date, there are no approved drugs for the prevention or treatment of restenosis after angioplasty. Restenosis is the re-narrowing or reclosure of coronary arteries after angioplasty in patients with coronary artery disease. Angioplasty procedures have been proven to be very effective in opening clogged arteries and have become widely used by cardiologists. More than one million patients around the world underwent the procedure last year. Unfortunately, angioplasty induces an inflammatory response that contributes to restenosis within approximately six months in up to 40 percent of the patients who undergo the procedure.
About AtheroGenics
AtheroGenics is focused on the discovery, development and commercialization of novel drugs for the treatment of chronic inflammatory diseases such as heart disease (atherosclerosis), rheumatoid arthritis and asthma. The company recently commenced enrollment in a Phase I clinical study for AGIX-4207, AtheroGenics' second v-protectant clinical candidate, a novel oral agent being developed for the treatment of the signs and symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis. For more information about AtheroGenics, please visit www.atherogenics.com .<<
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They prompted an upgrade and gap up in price, but the insiders keep selling -- managers/directors as well as VC. A good slug of the overhang is gone, and one would have to think once the VC are done exiting and the insiders following along a bit to pay the occasional bill are done with that, that the stock might recover nicely. If the science is OK.
I will look into the 10-K for info on model, managment, & partners. Also the filings to get an idea of when the VC might be done moving on. Would someone qualified -- know any interventional cardiologists, Stefaan -- please have a look at this data? Methinks the stock price could soon be attractive -- I like $5.50 as an intitial entry point -- so it would be nice to be ready. C'mon people, it's a therapeutic company! You like those, don't you? Join the Tuck & stefaan show!
Cheers, Tuck |