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UNMC Researchers to Evaluate Potential of New Drug with Standard Chemotherapy for Stage III Ovarian Cancer

Researchers at the University of Nebraska Medical Center are participating

in a nationwide clinical trial to evaluate the safety and effectiveness

of combining standard initial chemotherapy with IM862, a compound that

appears to have cancer fighting properties. Pre-clinical research suggests

that IM862 stimulates the bodys immune system and inhibits the development

of blood vessels needed by tumors to grow and spread.

The University of Washington and Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Centers

Puget Sound Oncology Consortium will lead the multi-center trial which

will involve 180 women with stage III ovarian cancer at 15 medical centers,

in addition to Omaha. Study sites are also located in Seattle, St. Louis,

Chapel Hill, N.C., Minneapolis, Los Angeles, Buffalo, N.Y., Madison, Wis.,

Cleveland, Washington, D.C. and Palo Alto, Calif.

About 27,000 new cases of ovarian cancer are detected each year in this

country and some 15,000 women die annually from the disease. Because no

reliable means of early detection exists, most cases are not diagnosed

before they reach an advanced stage. The majority of women with stage III

ovarian cancer initially achieve complete remission with surgery and standard

chemotherapy. However, many patients relapse with time.

It may provide more therapeutic benefits than other compounds. This

is an exciting protocol because of its unique method of delivery, via nose

drops, which patients can easily learn, said Kelly Molpus, M.D., director

of the UNMC Division of Gynecologic Oncology. The side effects have been

minimal, and therefore does not add significantly to the potential side

effects of standard chemotherapy.

To date, IM862 has been tested in clinical trials involving over 400

cancer patients and has demonstrated a favorable safety profile with generally

mild side effects, said Pamela Paley, M.D., gynecological oncologist at

the University of Washington and one of the principal investigators of

the study.

IM862 may reduce blood vessels that feed tumor cells, as well as increase

the ability of the patients own immune system to kill the cancer, said

Dr. Paley. Our hope is that the combination of IM862 and chemotherapy

will result in a larger number of women with ovarian cancer achieving long

term remission from their disease with little or no additional toxicity.

Women eligible for the study must be 18 years or older and newly diagnosed

with stage III ovarian cancer and have undergone optimal surgery for removal

of their tumor and not received prior treatment for their cancer. Patients

will be randomized to one of three arms of the study, each with a different

dose of IM862, while undergoing conventional treatment of six cycles of

chemotherapy.

Following combined treatment of chemotherapy and IM862, second look

surgery will be performed to assess presence of disease. Patients with

no evidence of disease, or with only microscopically detectable residual

disease, will be treated with IM862 for an additional 24 weeks. The trial

is double-blinded so neither patient nor physician will know which dose

of study drug the patient is receiving.

The studys primary objective is to determine the safety of IM862 when

it is given with chemotherapy as well as if the addition of IM862 increases

the percentage of patients with no evidence of disease at second look surgery.

Historically, about half of patients show evidence of disease at that time.

Secondary objectives include evaluation of occurrence of infection or other

complications, length of remission and the ability of IM862 to decrease

tumor blood supply and stimulate the immune system.

IM862, developed by Cytran, Inc. of Kirkland, Wash., is a synthesized

version of a naturally occurring small compound.

For more information on the study, contact Dr. Molpus at (402) 559-5068

or Cytran at (877) 449-4692 or visit the Cytran web site at www.cytran.com.