Vicuron Pharmaceuticals Announces Data at ICAAC Demonstrating Potency of Anidulafungin and Dalbavancin
01 November 2004 - 6:00PM
PR Newswire (US)
Vicuron Pharmaceuticals Announces Data at ICAAC Demonstrating
Potency of Anidulafungin and Dalbavancin KING OF PRUSSIA, Pa., Nov.
1 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Vicuron Pharmaceuticals Inc. (Nasdaq:
MICU; Nuovo Mercato) today announced details of oral and poster
presentations on its lead antifungal anidulafungin and lead
antibiotic dalbavancin at the 44th Annual Interscience Conference
on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC) meeting in
Washington, D.C. Highlights of data presented on anidulafungin and
dalbavancin at ICAAC include: - In vitro data demonstrating
dalbavancin's potency against a broad range of Gram-positive
bacteria, including methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA); - An oral presentation demonstrating anidulafungin's in
vitro activity shows anidulafungin is more potent than fluconazole
against Candida albicans biofilms, which are difficult-to-treat
hospital acquired infections; and - Clinical data on
anidulafungin's efficacy against azole-refractory mucosal
candidiasis. "The dalbavancin data demonstrate its potent in vitro
activity against recent clinical isolates of Staphylococci and
Streptococci in a large international survey, further supporting
the efficacy seen in our Phase 3 skin and soft tissue infection
studies," said Timothy J. Henkel, M.D., Ph.D., Chief Medical
Officer of Vicuron. "Anidulafungin's activity against Candida in a
biofilms model is particularly interesting because this is a common
and difficult-to-treat source of infection from catheters and
medical devices." Biofilms are a community of microorganisms, such
as bacteria or yeasts, which grow in an extracellular matrix
attached to a solid surface. Biofilms play a major role in the
infection of intravenous catheters, medical devices and implanted
prosthetic material. Bacteria or fungi growing in biofilms often
are highly resistant to drug therapy, and may require high doses of
antimicrobial drugs, long-term therapy, or even removal of the
catheter or device for successful treatment. About Anidulafungin
Anidulafungin is a naturally occurring molecule that has been
significantly improved through chemical modification. In vitro
studies have demonstrated that anidulafungin combines both the
potency and killing effects of the polyene class (e.g. amphotericin
B) without the resistance problems found with the azole class
(e.g., fluconazole). Anidulafungin is a broad- spectrum agent, and
has been demonstrated to be highly potent in vitro against the
fungi responsible for several serious fungal infections.
Preclinical studies have shown that five-minute exposure to
anidulafungin in vitro kills more than 99 percent of Candida,
including fluconazole-resistant strains. Anidulafungin has no
cross-resistance with azoles or amphotericin, and in the laboratory
it has proven very difficult to develop resistance to
anidulafungin. Anidulafungin also was well tolerated in a Phase 1
study when given in combination with cyclosporine, a leading
chronic immunosuppressive drug. About Dalbavancin Dalbavancin, a
novel second generation lipoglycopeptide agent, belongs to the same
class as vancomycin, the most widely-used and one of the few
treatments available to patients infected with the most
difficult-to-treat strains of Staphlococcus (Staph.): MRSA
(methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) and MRSE
(methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus epidermidis). Dalbavancin has
been specifically designed as an improved alternative to
vancomycin. In vitro studies have shown that in addition to being
potent against clinically important Gram-positive bacteria, it is
bactericidal (i.e., kills bacteria rather than merely inhibiting
their growth). The potency, tissue penetration and long half-life
of dalbavancin may allow for more flexible and convenient dosing
regimens than vancomycin. Dalbavancin also may help reduce the
length of hospital stays by decreasing the need for intravenous
lines that increase the risk of local and bloodstream infection. In
preclinical and clinical studies to date, dalbavancin appears to be
one of the most potent antibiotics in its class against MRSA and
MRSE and has not shown significant dose-limiting side effects.
About Vicuron Vicuron Pharmaceuticals is a biopharmaceutical
company focused on discovering, developing, manufacturing and
commercializing vital medicine for seriously ill patients. In May
2004, Vicuron received an approvable letter from the FDA for its
lead product anidulafungin for the treatment of esophageal
candidiasis. The company's other lead product, dalbavancin, a novel
intravenous antibiotic for the treatment of serious Gram-positive
infections, has completed Phase 3 clinical trials. The company's
versatile research engine integrates industry-leading expertise in
functional genomics, natural products discovery, mechanism-based
drug design and combinatorial and medicinal chemistry. These
approaches are yielding promising novel and next-generation
compounds, many of which are in the later stages of preclinical
development. In addition, the company has research and development
collaborations with leading pharmaceutical companies, such as
Pfizer and Novartis. Forward-Looking Statements This news release
contains forward-looking statements that predict or describe future
events or trends. The matters described in these forward-looking
statements are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties
and other unpredictable factors, many of which are beyond Vicuron's
control. Vicuron faces many risks that could cause its actual
performance to differ materially from the results predicted by its
forward-looking statements, including the possibilities that
clinical trials and the results thereof might be delayed, or
unsuccessful, that the timing of the filing of any new drug
application or any amendment to a new drug application might be
delayed, that clinical trials might indicate that a product
candidate is unsafe or ineffective, that the FDA might require
additional information to be submitted and additional actions to be
taken before it will make any decision, that any filed new drug
application may not be approved by the FDA, that ongoing
proprietary and collaborative research might not occur or yield
useful results, that the pipeline may not yield a new clinical
candidate or a commercial product, that a third party may not be
willing to license our product candidates on terms acceptable to us
or at all, that competitors might develop superior substitutes for
Vicuron's products or market these competitive products more
effectively, that a sales force may not be developed as
contemplated and that one or more of Vicuron's product candidates
may not be commercialized successfully. The reports that Vicuron
files with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission contain a
fuller description of these and many other risks to which Vicuron
is subject. Because of those risks, Vicuron's actual results,
performance or achievements may differ materially from the results,
performance or achievements contemplated by its forward-looking
statement. The information set forth in this news release
represents management's current expectations and intentions.
Vicuron assumes no responsibility to issue updates to the
forward-looking matters discussed in this news release. DATASOURCE:
Vicuron Pharmaceuticals Inc. CONTACT: Dov A. Goldstein, M.D. of
Vicuron Pharmaceuticals Inc., +1-610-205-2312, or ; or Hala Mirza
of WeissComm Partners, +1-212-204-2080, or , or Aline Schimmel of
Burns McClellan Inc., +1-212-213-0006, or , both for Vicuron
Pharmaceuticals Inc. Web site: http://www.vicuron.com/
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