Pathfinder Cell Therapy, Inc. ("Pathfinder," or "the Company")
(OTCQB:PFND), a biotechnology company focused on the treatment of
diabetes and other diseases characterized by organ-specific cell
damage, today presented preliminary data highlighting the potential
of the Company's unique cell-based therapy for treating diabetes at
the 7th Annual New York Stem Cell Summit. Richard L. Franklin,
M.D., Ph.D., Founder, CEO and President of Pathfinder, provided an
overview of the Company's Pathfinder Cell ("PC") technology, and
presented preclinical evidence demonstrating how treatment with PCs
was able to reverse the symptoms of diabetes in two different mouse
models.
Pathfinder Cells are a newly identified non-stem cell mammalian
cell type that has the ability to stimulate regeneration of damaged
tissue without being incorporated into the new tissue. In
today's presentation, Dr. Franklin showed how recent experiments
performed using a non-obese diabetic (NOD) mouse strain were
supportive of earlier data that demonstrated complete reversal of
diabetes in mice. The earlier results, which used a
drug-induced diabetic mouse model, were published in Rejuvenation
Research1. Though preliminary, the recent results are
encouraging because the NOD mouse model is widely used and highly
regarded as being predictive of human type-1 diabetes.
In three separate experiments using this model, 30-50% of the
mice treated with PCs at the onset of diabetes returned to normal
blood glucose levels. Of the mice that responded well to
treatment, the effects tended to be long lasting, up to two months
in some cases after just two doses. These results, which were
generated by intravenous injection of PC's derived from rat
pancreatic tissue, further demonstrate the remarkable ability of
Pathfinder Cells to elicit their positive effect regardless of the
organ, or even species, of origin.
"We are very encouraged by these preclinical results using NOD
mice. This model is the gold standard for type-1 diabetes and
the fact that recent experiments mirror what we've seen in previous
models may be highly significant," stated Dr. Franklin. "We
have many questions to answer about how PCs act in the body, but we
believe, based on previous experiments, that PCs may stimulate
regeneration of damaged islet cells that produce insulin. The
current NOD mouse data also suggest that PCs may have an effect in
modulating the auto-immune process in type 1 diabetes. We
continue to conduct experiments aimed at elucidating the optimal
dosing and other factors that may be responsible for producing a
robust and long-lasting response, as this will be critical as we
start to think about how PCs may be used in treating human
diabetes."
In his presentation today, Dr. Franklin also provided further
insight into the mechanism of action of PCs, based on recent animal
experiments. It was observed previously that PCs produce
microvesicles, which are known to play a role in intercellular
communication, but through mechanisms that are poorly
understood. In a recent experiment, Pathfinder was able to
isolate these microvesicles from the PCs and treat animals directly
with an injection containing microvesicles only. Remarkably,
both PC- and microvesicle-treated mice exhibited similar reductions
in blood glucose compared to controls using the same drug-induced
diabetes mouse model. This suggests, not only that the
microvesicles produced by PCs are central to the mechanism of
action, but that the microvesicles alone appear to be sufficient to
produce the full effect.
Dr. Franklin commented, "If confirmed, this finding could have a
significant positive impact on the future of PC-based
therapy. Due to the relatively small amount of material
contained within the microvesicles, determining the specific
factor(s) that are responsible for regenerating damaged tissue
could be more straightforward than we first anticipated, bringing
us closer to understanding the mechanism of action. There may
also be a number of potential manufacturing and storage benefits to
using microvesicles versus PCs that will be interesting to explore
in parallel as we work to advance this innovative new therapeutic
approach closer to human clinical development."
The New York Stem Cell Summit brings together cell therapy
company executives, researchers, investors and physicians to
explore investment opportunities in cell therapy research and
innovation. More information can be found at
www.stemcellsummit.com.
Presentation
details |
|
Event: |
7th Annual New York Stem Cell Summit |
|
Date: |
Tuesday, February 21, 2012 |
|
Place: |
Bridgewaters New York, 11 Fulton Street, New
York, NY |
|
Time: |
3:35 pm ET |
About Pathfinder
Pathfinder is developing a novel cell-based therapy and has
generated encouraging preclinical data in models of diabetes, renal
disease, myocardial infarction, and critical limb ischemia, a
severe form of peripheral vascular disease. Leveraging its
internal discovery of Pathfinder Cells ("PCs") Pathfinder is
pioneering a new field in regenerative medicine.
PCs are a newly identified mammalian cell type present in very
low quantities in a variety of organs, including the kidney, liver,
pancreas, lymph nodes, myometrium, bone marrow and blood.
Early studies indicate that PCs stimulate regeneration of
damaged tissues without the cells themselves being incorporated
into the newly generated tissue. Based on testing to date, the
cells appear to be "immune privileged," and their effects appear to
be independent of the tissue source of PCs. For more
information please visit: www.pathfindercelltherapy.com.
FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS
This press release contains forward-looking statements.
You should be aware that our actual results could differ
materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements,
which are based on management's current expectations and are
subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, including, but not
limited to, our inability to obtain additional required financing;
costs and delays in the development and/or FDA approval, or the
failure to obtain such approval, of our product candidates;
uncertainties or differences in interpretation in clinical trial
results, if any; our inability to maintain or enter into, and the
risks resulting from our dependence upon, collaboration or
contractual arrangements necessary for the development,
manufacture, commercialization, marketing, sales and distribution
of any products; competitive factors; our inability to protect our
patents or proprietary rights and obtain necessary rights to third
party patents and intellectual property to operate our business;
our inability to operate our business without infringing the
patents and proprietary rights of others; general economic
conditions; the failure of any products to gain market acceptance;
technological changes; and government regulation. We do not
intend to update any of these factors or to publicly announce the
results of any revisions to these forward-looking statements.
1Karen Stevenson, Daxin Chen, Alan MacIntyre, Liane M McGlynn,
Paul Montague, Rawiya Charif, Murali Subramaniam, W.D. George,
Anthony P. Payne, R. Wayne Davies, Anthony Dorling, and Paul G.
Shiels. Rejuvenation Research. April 2011, 14(2): 163-171.
doi:10.1089/rej.2010.1099
CONTACT: The Ruth Group
Joshua Drumm (investors) / Victoria Aguiar (media)
(646) 536-7006 / (646) 536-7013
jdrumm@theruthgroup.com / vaguiar@theruthgroup.com
Rick Franklin
CEO, Pathfinder Cell Therapy, Inc.
rick.franklin@pathfindercelltherapy.com
Pathfinder Cell Therapy (CE) (USOTC:PFND)
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