News Focus
News Focus
Post# of 257300
Next 10
Followers 843
Posts 122817
Boards Moderated 10
Alias Born 09/05/2002

Re: besharp2c post# 1424

Tuesday, 03/09/2004 5:07:49 AM

Tuesday, March 09, 2004 5:07:49 AM

Post# of 257300
Re: VEGF-Trap vs Squalamine:

besharp2c: Thanks for the bad-link alert; link truncation is a long-standing iHub problem. To see Mark Z’s MOA posts, use these two links instead:

http://tinyurl.com/27fqx
http://tinyurl.com/2kn32

As you can see, Mark makes a strong case for the superiority of Squalamine to VEGF inhibitors as a class, and REGN’s VEGF-Trap is a VEGF inhibitor.

>> Which brings me to the question: Is GENR's MOA uniquely suited to systemic administration because of the uptake mechanism, or does REGN's VEGF-Trap share the same or similarly-satisfactory MOA? <<

Squalamine is well-suited for systemic administration in AMD because: 1) It is a small molecule capable of passing through the blood-retinal barrier; and 2) It has a short systemic half-life.

Aventis evidently thinks that VEGF-Trap shares these characteristics, but this will have to be proven in the clinic.

Regarding your question about the IND for VEGF-Trap: I think we can assume from today’s PR that the IND has already been accepted by the FDA.

--
P.S. I had planned to update the “Read Me First” packet in about a week but, due to the truncated link you found, I will do it ASAP.



“The efficient-market hypothesis may be
the foremost piece of B.S. ever promulgated
in any area of human knowledge!”

Discover What Traders Are Watching

Explore small cap ideas before they hit the headlines.

Join Today