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| [March 11, 2013] |
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Cell>Point and HYUN IMC Expand License in South Korea to Include Hanmi Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd for Cancer and Heart Disease Imaging
CENTENNIAL, Colo. --(Business Wire)--
Cell>Point announced today that it entered into a license agreement on
December 17, 2012 with Hanmi Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd (Hanmi) who is
headquartered in Seoul, Korea. The license agreement also includes HYUN
IMC as a party (who Cell>Point previously entered into a license with in
February 2012 and subsequently amended and restated the license
agreement with HYUN IMC on December 4, 2012). The license agreement with
Hanmi covers the kit manufacture, marketing and distribution of
Cell>Point's cancer and cardiology imaging product based on its
Ethylenedicysteine-Glucosamine (EC-G) technology platform. The initial
product will be technetium-99m labeled EC-G (99mTc-EC-G) for
SPECT and SPECT/CT imaging. Downstream, the license agreement will cover
gallium-68 labeled EC-G (68Ga-EC-G) for PET/CT imaging. In
addition, Hanmi has been granted a Right of First Refusal regarding
Cell>Point's cold metallic therapeutic products Platinum-EC-G and 187Rhenium-EC-G,
and two imaging products, 99mTc-EC-Annexin V to image tumor
cell apoptosis, and 99mTc-EC-Metronidazole to image tumor
cell hypoxia.
Cell>Point receives upfront payments, milestone progress payments, and a
royalty on commercial sales.
"We are pleased to associate with such an outstanding pharmaceutical
company whose vision is to bring imaging technology to South Korea that
has the potential to make high quality cancer imaging more affordable
and accessible at a time when the cost of healthcare is becoming a
national priority, as it is in many other countries around the world. In
addition, Hanmi Pharmaceutical Co. is committed to making available
cardiovascular imaging technology that has the potential to increase
diagnostic accuracy, drastically shorten the time that the patient has
to devote to a cardiovascular study, and make the study considerably
easier for the patient," said Cell>Point CEO Greg Colip.
99mTc-EC-G, invented at The University of Texas M.D. Anderson
Cancer Center and acquired by Cell>Point, is a target-specific molecular
imaging radiopharmaceutical that has moved into a Phase 3 lung cancer
imaging trial and Phase 2 cardiology imaging trial.
99mTc-EC-G is injected intravenously and then imaged using a
Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) camera (sometimes
referred to as a gamma camera) or a combination SPECT/Computed
Tomography (SPECT/CT) camera system. The current standard of care in
cancer molecular imaging is fluorine-18 FluoroDeoxyGlucose (18F-FDG)
imaged using a combination Positron Emission Tomography /Computed
Tomography (PET/CT) camera system.
99mTc-EC-G Phase 3 lung cancer imaging trial
For the Phase 3 lung cancer study, all patients wil be imaged with 99mTc-EC-G
on SPECT/CT and separately imaged with 18F-FDG on PET/CT
cameras. Where combination SPECT/CT cameras are not available, a special
workstation will be used to integrate the patient images taken from the
stand-alone SPECT and CT cameras. Using a workstation to integrate the
images allows the medical site to take full advantage of 99mTc-EC-G
without the need for a new combination SPECT/CT camera on the premises.
This should significantly expand the utilization of the installed SPECT
camera base in the United States and the rest of the world, which is
already substantially greater than the PET and PET/CT camera base. The
lung cancer trial will be followed by Phase 4 trials in lymphoma,
breast, liver, colorectal, prostate, and head and neck cancers.
99mTc-EC-G Phase 2 cardiology imaging trial
In a separate clinical trial, 99mTc-EC-G has moved from a
Phase 1 to a Phase 2 cardiovascular imaging study. The product is the
same as that used in the oncology trials. 99mTc-EC-G exhibits
minimal uptake in the normal heart; however, it exhibits very high
uptake in heart cells that are ischemic (i.e., deprivation of blood
flow), such as from atherosclerotic heart disease. The Phase 2
cardiovascular trial involves patients who have suspected coronary
artery disease and compares 99mTc-EC-G images of the heart
with images obtained from the standard of care nuclear cardiology
procedure, a full "stress/rest" Myocardial Perfusion Imaging (MPI)
protocol.
One of the clinical objectives is to compare the results from the "rest"
only portion of the 99mTc-EC-G study to the results from the
full "stress/rest" MPI study. Based on clinical evidence from the Phase
1 study, Cell>Point believes clinical information from the 99mTc-EC-G
"rest" study has the potential for greater diagnostic accuracy in less
study time than that required from conducting the full "stress/rest" MPI
study. The standard MPI study uses either 99mTc-sestamibi or
thallium 201 for the "stress/rest" images. The traditional "stress/rest"
MPI study can take up to 5 to 7 hours to complete, whereas the "rest"
only 99mTc-EC-G study can be completed in 30 to 45 minutes.
This has the potential to dramatically change the logistics of nuclear
cardiovascular imaging by providing more comfort and convenience for the
patient, by eliminating the need for a stress test and the shorter time
required to complete the imaging.
About Cell>Point
Cell>Point is a commercialization-stage biopharmaceutical company
developing universal molecular imaging agents and molecular therapeutics
for the diagnosis, treatment and treatment monitoring of cancer, heart,
and other diseases. Cell>Point has exclusive license to five
drug-development platforms covering cancer imaging and therapy,
cardiovascular imaging, high-yield radio/chemotherapy delivery system
for treating inoperable and unresectable tumors, neuroendocrine disease
imaging and therapy, diabetes imaging, and dual compound imaging in
cancer for SPECT/CT, SPECT/MRI, PET/CT, and PET/MRI, all from The
University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, a world
leader in cancer research and care. Information on Cell>Point's drug
candidates and licenses, recent press releases, and patents and patent
filings can be obtained through its website at www.cellpointweb.com.
The company is headquartered in Centennial, Colo., and has additional
offices in San Francisco and Houston.
About Hanmi Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd
Established in 1973, Hanmi Pharmaceuticals has risen to be one of the
top 5 pharmaceutical companies in Korea, and has been the most R&D
focused company with the highest R&D investment for several years. Hanmi
Pharmaceuticals has worldwide offices in major countries such as, but
not limited to, China, Japan, Europe, and the U.S. The company's
long-term strategy has been to remain highly flexible, to recognize the
need to continuously change and adapt its market and development
strategy from its beginnings as a generic pharmaceutical company to
Incrementally Modified Drug and Fixed Dose Combination Drugs, and to new
drug development including innovative small molecules and biologics. The
company has more than 10 FDC pipelines including collaboration projects
with Merck, Glaxo SmithKline and Sanofi. During the period of open
innovation, Hanmi Pharmaceuticals made multiple strategic collaborations
with multinational companies and biotech companies. The company is
actively conducting clinical trials for new drug pipelines such as
biobetter drugs with LAPSCOVERY (Long Acting Protein-Peptide Discovery
Platform Technology) and small molecule oncology pipelines in global
markets.
About HYUN IMC
HYUN IMC is a South Korean company with interests throughout the Pacific
Rim. The company's core business is in the manufacture and distribution
of various medical isotope generators, the production and installation
of hot cells, and trading in pharmaceutical raw materials. Through its
affiliation with and support from Korean pharmaceutical companies, HYUN
IMC made the decision to expand its nuclear medicine business by moving
into radiopharmaceutical manufacturing and distribution.

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