Contact Information: CONTACTS: AUSTRALIA: Biota Holdings Limited Peter Cook T: 011 61 3 9915 3720 Damian Lismore T: 011 61 3 9915 3721 Hinton & Associates Tim Duncan or Nerida Mossop T: 011 61 3 9600 1979 M: 011 61 437 361 433 USA David Sheon WHITECOAT Strategies 202 470-2880
LANI Phase II Completed -- Phase III Scheduled
| Quelle: Biota Holdings
MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA--(Marketwire - July 30, 2008) - Biota Holdings Limited (ASX : BTA )
today announced that its second generation, influenza treatment, CS-8958,
has successfully completed its initial Phase II clinical evaluation,
showing favourable outcomes against all measured endpoints. The initial
Phase III trial is scheduled to commence later this year. CS-8958 is a long
acting neuraminidase inhibitor (LANI), and is co-owned with Daiichi-Sankyo.
The Phase II clinical trial was designed to test the safety and efficacy of
CS-8958 in several hundred adult patients who had confirmed, naturally
acquired influenza A or B using fever and symptom resolution endpoints
after a single inhaled dose. The study was conducted in accordance with
guidance from the Japanese Pharmaceuticals and Medical Devices Agency
(PMDA). In the double-blinded trial, inhaled CS-8958 administered once only
was statistically indistinguishable from 75mg of oseltamivir administered
twice daily for 5 consecutive days. In earlier pre-clinical tests, CS-8958
has also shown efficacy against H5N1 avian influenza virus as well as
influenza A and B.
Biota and Daiichi-Sankyo are satisfied that the safety, tolerability and
efficacy data has fully demonstrated proof of concept for LANI and
therefore intend to continue with the product's clinical development. The
Phase II results are being used to finalise the design of the pivotal Phase
III registration trial due to be conducted in the next northern hemisphere
autumn/winter influenza season. It is intended that the Phase III study be
pan-Asian and include Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Korea.
A parallel Phase II study, undertaken elsewhere in Asia, has also completed
dosing. The results of both trials will be used to support the
international regulatory and development program planned for LANI.
Biota CEO Peter Cook said, "This is an important milestone for LANI. We
congratulate our partner, Daiichi-Sankyo, for a timely completion of Phase
II."
A range of other LANI type compounds are also co-owned by Biota and
Daiichi-Sankyo and are in pre-clinical development under a grant from the
US National Institutes of Health.
About Daiichi-Sankyo
Daiichi-Sankyo Co. Ltd (TSE 4568) is one of Japan's largest pharmaceutical
companies.
Daiichi-Sankyo has a long history of discovering new classes of drugs,
including the first-in-class statin drug for treatment of high cholesterol.
In 2003, Daiichi-Sankyo and Biota combined their LANI research programs.
About Biota
Biota is a leading anti-infective drug development company based in
Melbourne, Australia, with key expertise in respiratory diseases,
particularly influenza. Biota developed the first-in-class neuraminidase
inhibitor, zanamivir, subsequently marketed by GlaxoSmithKline as Relenza.
Biota research breakthroughs have included a series of candidate drugs
aimed at treatment of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) disease, licensed
to MedImmune Inc. and novel nucleoside analogues designed to treat
hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections, licensed to Boehringer Ingelheim. Biota
has clinical trials underway with its lead compound for human rhinovirus
(HRV) infection in patients with compromised respiration or immune systems.
In addition, Biota has a key partnership with Daiichi-Sankyo for the
development of second generation influenza antivirals. Inverness Medical
markets Biota's co-developed OIA FLU influenza diagnostics.
Relenza™ is a registered trademark of the GlaxoSmithKline group of
companies. BioStar® OIA® FLU and BioStar® OIA® FLU A/B are
registered trademarks of Inverness Medical.
*Further information available at www.biota.com.au.
About LANIs (Long-Acting Neuraminidase Inhibitors)
Current neuraminidase inhibitors for influenza require daily or more
frequent dosing. The ability to dose patients on a weekly, or even less
frequent, basis offers numerous benefits. Firstly, any stockpile of
weekly-dosing drug will last longer and protect more people, in the case of
an influenza pandemic. Additionally, a weekly dose may improve patient
compliance over a more frequent regime.