Genmab and Sanquin Collaborate to Improve Hemophilia Treatment
16 Décembre 2003 - 3:04PM
PR Newswire (US)
Genmab and Sanquin Collaborate to Improve Hemophilia Treatment
COPENHAGEN, December 16 /PRNewswire/ -- Summary: Genmab enters into
research collaboration and option agreement with Dutch
not-for-profit organization Sanquin Blood Supply Foundation to
develop an improved treatment for hemophiliacs. Genmab A/S (CSE:
GEN) announced today that it has entered into a research
collaboration with the Dutch not-for-profit organization Sanquin
Blood Supply Foundation to develop a potential improvement in the
treatment for haemophilia patients who are not able to respond
adequately to standard therapy with factor VIII. Hemophiliacs
suffer from excessive bleeding because their blood does not clot
properly. They are generally treated with factor VIII that replaces
the missing clotting product. However, approximately 38% of
patients with haemophilia who have been treated with factor VIII,
develop antibodies against it that make the treatment less
effective. This is a serious complication that can be life
threatening and risk of death in these patients has been identified
as five times greater than in patients who do not develop
antibodies. Sanquin has discovered a method of preventing these
inhibitory antibodies from binding to factor VIII. This method
involves using new antibodies to block the sites where the
inhibitory antibodies bind and thus allow factor VIII to continue
working. Under the terms of the agreement, Genmab will support a
limited research program at Sanquin to further validate this
approach. The agreement includes an option for Genmab to license
Sanquin's technology on specified terms. This agreement will not
affect Genmab's financial guidance for 2003. "We are happy to
expand our pipeline with this novel approach to treating
haemophilia," said Lisa N. Drakeman, Ph.D., Chief Executive Officer
of Genmab. "This agreement underlines our efforts to build a broad
based antibody business." About the program Sanquin has identified
locations on factor VIII where the inhibitory antibodies bind. To
prevent these antibodies from attaching to factor VIII ,
researchers cover these locations with antibody fragments to
provide a blockade around factor VIII. Genmab may use the
antibodies developed by Sanquin or create novel antibodies from the
HuMAb-Mouse(R) for future product development. There are an
estimated 60,000 haemophilia patients in the US, Europe, Canada,
and Japan. Some patients already have developed inhibitory
antibodies and would be candidates for a therapeutic product to
maintain factor VIII activity. Patients receiving blood derived and
recombinant factor VIII can develop inhibitory antibodies. Patients
with haemophilia who are treated with factor VIII have
approximately a 38% risk of developing inhibitory antibodies
against it. Initially, scientists believed that treatment with
recombinant factor VIII resulted in a higher frequency of
inhibitory antibodies but more recent studies suggest that a
similar frequency of inhibitor formation is observed in haemophilia
patients receiving either blood derived or recombinant factor VIII.
Inhibitor formation may be transient but can also persist for
longer periods of time. Clinically, inhibitory antibodies directed
against factor VIII result in an increased bleeding tendency that
can not be corrected by factor VIII replacement therapy. A
treatment that blocks the activity of these antibodies could be
used prophylactically for patients who continue to need factor VIII
therapy. Conference Call Genmab's Management will hold a conference
call to discuss the pipeline expansion news today, December 16,
2003 at 4.00 pm CET 3.00 pm BST 10.00 am US Eastern Time
+1-800-915-4836 (in the US) and ask for the Genmab conference call
+1-973-317-5319 (outside the US) and ask for the Genmab conference
call The conference call will be held in English About Genmab A/S
Genmab A/S is a biotechnology company that creates and develops
human antibodies for the treatment of life-threatening and
debilitating diseases. Genmab has numerous products in development
to treat cancer, rheumatoid arthritis and other inflammatory
conditions, and intends to assemble a broad portfolio of new
therapeutic products arising from research into the human genome.
At present, Genmab has multiple partnerships to gain access to
disease targets and develop novel human antibodies including
agreements with Roche and Amgen. A broad alliance provides Genmab
with access to Medarex, Inc.'s array of proprietary technologies,
including the UltiMAb(TM) platform for the rapid creation and
development of human antibodies to virtually any disease target.
Genmab is headquartered in Copenhagen, Denmark and has operations
in Utrecht, The Netherlands and Princeton, New Jersey in the US.
For more information about Genmab, visit www.genmab.com. About
Sanquin Blood Supply Foundation Sanquin, a Dutch not for profit
organisation, comprises the divisions Sanquin Research, Sanquin
Plasma Products, Sanquin Diagnostic Services (at the 'CLB location'
Amsterdam) and four blood banks. The organisation was founded 60
years ago and currently employs 2,800 people. Sanquin Research is
involved in basic and applied scientific research, training and
education. The research departments support the Sanquin objectives
regarding a safe and sufficient blood supply of the highest
quality. Accordingly, Sanquin Research provides a scientific
foundation for the products and services of Sanquins divisions and
the business units Sanquin Pharmaceutical Services and Sanquin
Reagents. The research department of Plasma Proteins headed by
professor Koen Mertens is involved in the collaboration with Genmab
for a potential improvement in the treatment for haemophilia
patients not responding adequately to standard therapy with factor
VIII. The research of this department addresses a variety of blood
plasma proteins, in particular constituents of the coagulation
system, the clotting mechanism of the blood . The programme is
closely related to the production by Sanquin of pharmaceutical
plasma proteins from human plasma. For more information about
Sanquin, visit www.sanquin.nl. Except for the historical
information presented herein, matters discussed in this press
release are forward-looking statements that are subject to certain
risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ
materially from any future results, performance or achievements
expressed or implied by such statements, e.g. unforeseen exchange
rate and interest rate fluctuations, delayed or unsuccessful
development projects. Statements that are not historical facts,
including statements preceded by, followed by, or that include the
words "believes"; "anticipates"; "plans"; "expects"; "estimates";
or similar statements are forward-looking statements. Genmab is not
under an obligation to up-date statements regarding the future
following the publication of this release; nor to confirm such
statements in relation to actual results, unless this is required
by law. HuMAb-Mouse(R) is a registered trademark of Medarex, Inc.
All rights are reserved. Web site: http://www.genmab.com,
http://www.sanquin.nl DATASOURCE: PR Newswire (New York) Sisse P.
Hansen, Investor & Public Relations, T: +45-33-44-77-76, M:
+45-25-27-47-27, sha@genmab.com.
Copyright