FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
DUKE COMPREHENSIVE CANCER CENTER AND ABC2 COLLABORATE
TO ACCELERATE TESTING OF NEW BRAIN CANCER DRUGS
DURHAM, N.C. April 8, 2002 -- Researchers at the Duke Comprehensive
Cancer Center and Accelerate Brain Cancer Cure (ABC2), a nonprofit
foundation, hope to compress the lengthy and expensive process of
testing new brain cancer drugs through a unique collaboration to
accelerate drug development faster than traditional approaches.
"The goal of the collaboration is to rapidly move potentially
life-saving drugs from the laboratory to the clinic in an effort
to save brain tumor patients, who have little time and few therapeutic
options available to them," said Darell Bigner, M.D., Director
Pro tempore of the Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center.
The protocol invites researchers from any venue - academia, corporations
and government agencies - to submit compounds to Duke for immediate
screening, free of charge. "Such an offer is highly unusual
in the drug research and development arena," said Dr. Bigner,
"where funding is extremely scarce for so-called 'translational'
studies that advance drugs from the laboratory to the clinic.
"With the help of ABC2, we are filling a tremendous void in
the drug discovery and development arena," said Dr. Bigner.
"The partnership is truly unique because ABC2 is establishing
a critical link between biotech and pharmaceutical companies and
academia to quickly evaluate compounds and move them into clinical
trials."
The open invitation to researchers is expected to encourage pharmaceutical
companies to submit their approved and experimental anti-cancer
drugs (for breast, colon, lung cancer, etc.) to Duke for further
testing for their potential utility against brain cancer, since
there will be no cost to the companies.
According to Bigner, Duke is in a unique position to provide this
opportunity because of its creative partnership with ABC2, which
is helping to fund the drug discovery process for brain tumor drugs
at Duke. Funding from ABC2 will support researchers in the Brain
Tumor Center at Duke as they test new and existing compounds that
may act against the most common form of brain cancer, malignant
glioma. Duke is well positioned to test new and existing compounds
because it has a large number of human gliomas developed from biopsies
that grow in immunocompromised mice, said Bigner.
"Typically, the drug testing process is long and laborious,"
said Henry Friedman, M.D., Clinical Co-Director of the Brain Tumor
Center at Duke. "Researchers can spend years testing a single
compound in laboratory cell cultures, then in mice, just to find
that it lacks the same effect in humans. The cost for such endeavors
is huge. Few companies can afford to invest their research dollars
on finding cures for rare diseases that affect small percentages
of the population, as does brain cancer. Thus, funding sources are
scarce and few compounds ever make it into the final stages of testing."
The new partnership will enable the Duke team to rapidly screen
and test new drugs in the lab, then move them into the clinic more
quickly than traditional approaches - within 18 to 24 months after
testing - to potentially save patients who are likely to die of
this life-threatening disease, said Friedman.
Researchers from academia, corporations and government agencies
will be invited to submit applications for their drugs to be screened
at no cost to them. A joint committee at Duke and ABC2 will review
compounds prior to testing their utility in animal models. Applicants
and their drugs will be selected throughout the year 2002 based
upon parameters that will be posted on the ABC2 Web site, www.ABC2.org.
About ABC2
ABC2 was founded May 2001 by Dan and Steve Case and their families,
along with leading scientists and entrepreneurs. In order to accelerate
progress in what has been an under-served field of research, ABC2
provides researchers from all backgrounds with the support they
need to make critical breakthroughs in brain cancer research. ABC2
aims to raise awareness about brain cancer and help mobilize critical
scientific research through research grants and partnerships.
Additional information about the Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center
can be found on the Web at www.cancer.duke.edu.
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