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To: gamesmistress who wrote (25469)12/10/1998 10:59:00 AM
From: JimBeamII  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 119973
 
Gina -- FYI: this is the PR off Yahoo regarding Dec 12 Seattle Cancer Forum in which ASTM is referenced:

Wednesday December 9, 11:57 am Eastern Time

Company Press Release

Flurry of Cancer Coups Follows Major Conference

SEATTLE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec. 9, 1998--While Christmas shoppers troop to the mall,
biotechnology researchers trek to year-end conferences to report the latest efforts of their companies to
combat major diseases.

We're waiting for numbers on retailers' success, but the data are back from biotech: it's been a banner year.

''Industry conferences are integral to the inner workings of the drug-development process,'' explained Tim Quast of Informed Investors
Forum in Sacramento, Calif., which hosts the Cancer Forum in Seattle Dec. 12 (See www.informedinvestors.com for details).

''They are rallying points,'' Quast added, ''for all the parties involved in the process -- scientists, research facilities, biotechnology and
pharmaceutical executives and investors -- where everyone can compare notes, reinforce the validity of their efforts and offer glimpses
into major advances. It's always exciting.''

The American Society of Hematology (ASH) held its 40th annual conference this week in Miami, and an outbreak of major
announcements has followed.

Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and BioTransplant (Nasdaq: BTRN - news) reported positive results on a new therapy for
treating blood cell cancers that re-programs the immune system and replaces cancerous blood cells. Aastrom Biosciences
(Nasdaq:ASTM - news) said its researchers were successfully growing sufficient numbers of umbilical cord blood cells as a promising
source of replacement cells in bone marrow transplants.

Also, research funded by Genentech (NYSE:GNE - news) and Pharmacia & Upjohn (NYSE:PNU - news) showed that a genetically
engineered drug stimulated stem cells -- the body's primitive bone marrow cells and the ultimate source of all blood cells -- to migrate out
of the bone marrow and into the bloodstream, thus preserving a source of stem cells during chemotherapy, which kills both healthy and
cancerous cells.

Seattle's own Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (FHCRC) presented data at ASH on a potential new treatment for cancer that
could make the indiscriminate cell destruction caused by chemotherapy a thing of the past. The research effort connects an antibody to
chemotherapy molecules to specifically target cancerous cells.

Dr. Leland Hartwell, Director of the FHCRC, keynotes the only conference for individual investors focused on cancer, the Seattle
Cancer Forum on Dec. 12 at the Downtown Hilton. For details call Informed Investors Forum at 800/992-4683.