Too hyped for my taste, but should help the stock (unless last week's climb was based on this news):
News Alert from PR Newswire via Quote.com Topic: (NASDAQ:SUPG) Supergen Inc, Quote.com News Item #8701152 Headline: SuperGen expands Phase III studies of RFS 2000(R) For Pancreatic Cancer to More Than 50 Sites Across U.S.
====================================================================== Company's Strategy is to Establish RFS 2000 as a Broad Spectrum Anticancer Drug for Treating Solid Tumors and Hematological Malignancies
"This is the most hopeful development I have seen in 30 years of fighting cancer."
John S. Stehlin, M.D., Surgical Oncologist Director, Stehlin Foundation for Cancer Research
SAN RAMON, Calif., Jan. 6 /PRNewswire/ -- SuperGen Inc. (NASDAQ:SUPG, SUPGW) announced today that it has significantly expanded its Phase III studies of RFS 2000(R), the Company's proprietary drug, to treat pancreatic cancer. The Phase III program is comprised of two studies. The first compares RFS 2000 to Gemzar(R) in patients who have not had prior chemotherapy. Gemcitabine (Gemzar(R), Eli Lilly & Company), was recently approved by the FDA to treat pancreatic cancer. Analysts expect Gemzar to realize $325 million in sales this year, and $550 million in 1999 -- even though Gemzar extends the median time of survival of pancreatic-cancer patients by only four to six weeks and has little impact on shrinking the cancer. The second study compares RFS 2000 in patients who have previously been treated with gemcitabine, to 5-FU, a drug that has been the traditional treatment against pancreatic cancer. "Until now, there has not been a single drug that was really effective in treating pancreatic cancer," said John S. Stehlin, M.D., the surgical oncologist who founded the Houston-based Stehlin Foundation for Cancer Research in 1969. "RFS 2000 is the most hopeful development I have seen in 30 years of fighting cancer." The median survival for patients diagnosed with pancreatic cancer is four to five months. Patients responding to RFS 2000 have a median survival of 16-18 months, according to Dr. Stehlin, "which is absolutely remarkable," he said. In addition, two pancreatic cancer patients achieved complete remission while using RFS 2000. An additional advantage of RFS 2000, Dr. Stehlin pointed out, is that the drug can be given orally on an outpatient basis, in contrast to other cancer drugs that have to be given intravenously either in a hospital or physician's office. "RFS 2000 is the most important drug in our broad pipeline, and our most advanced and top-priority clinical project," said Dr. Joseph Rubinfeld, chairman and chief executive officer of SuperGen. "Our expanded Phase III studies have been designed to provide us with the pivotal data we will need to support a New Drug Application to the FDA in the most timely manner possible." RFS 2000 is a second-generation, topoisomerase-I inhibitor that causes breaks in the DNA of rapidly dividing cancer cells, thus destroying them. Pancreatic cancer -- which caused the deaths of celebrities and dignitaries such as Cardinal Bernadin, Michael Landon, Marcello Mastroianni, Juliet Prowse and Donna Reed -- is one of the most deadly cancers: It kills 28,000 people every year, most within four to five months after diagnosis. In addition to pancreatic cancer, RFS 2000 has shown activity in many tumor types, including: ovarian, breast, lung and colorectal cancers. A clinical study underway at the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston using RFS 2000 has shown efficacy in fifty percent of patients suffering from myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)/chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML), thus indicating a very broad spectrum of activity encompassing both solid tumors and hematologic malignancies. Several advantages distinguish RFS 2000 as a potential therapy for treating cancer. One advantage is its side-effects profile relative to other anticancer drugs. In studies to date, none of the cardiac, pulmonary, hepatic, neurological or renal toxicities that limit the acute and/or chronic dosages of most chemotherapies have been observed and, in fact, studies suggest that RFS 2000 could be used to treat cancer on a chronic, rather than acute, basis. The primary side effects are manageable hematological toxicities, low-grade cystitis (bladder irritation), and some gastrointestinal disorder -- "In all, a relatively benign profile," said Dr. Stehlin. Equally important, RFS 2000 is an oral drug, where patients can be dosed at home, thus providing convenience for patients and potentially considerable cost-savings to the healthcare system. Based in San Ramon, California, SuperGen is a pharmaceutical company dedicated to the development and commercialization of products intended to treat life-threatening diseases, particularly cancer. SuperGen has an evolving portfolio of anti-cancer drugs. The company is currently marketing Nipent(TM) for the first-line and refractory treatment of hairy cell leukemia, a type of B-lymphocytic leukemia.
This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 21A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and are subject to the safe harbors created thereby. Such statements involve certain risks and uncertainties associated with an emerging pharmaceutical company. Actual results could differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements as a result of risk factors discussed in SuperGen's reports on file with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (including but not limited to the report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 1998).
SOURCE SuperGen Inc. -0- 01/06/99 /CONTACT: L. Robert Cohen of SuperGen, Inc., 925-327-0200, or Jon Siegal or Steve Danehy of Ronald Trahan Associates, Inc., 617-332-0101/ /Web site: supergen.com |