Boston Life Sciences announces results of Phase I/II study on Altropane.BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 16, 1996--Boston Life Sciences Inc. (Nasdaq:BLSI BLSI Boston Life Sciences, Inc. ) announced that a physician-sponsored Phase I/II study on its Parkinson's Disease diagnostic agent, Altropane(TM), was complete. In the Phase I portion of the study, Altropane was administered to ten healthy normal volunteers in order to determine safety and brain image quality. The Phase II portion of the study was designed to test Altropane's ability to detect changes in the number of dopamine transporters in the brain in nine patients with clinically diagnosed Parkinson's Disease. The study was carried out at the Massachusetts General Hospital Massachusetts General Hospital Health care The major teaching hospital for Harvard Medical School, widely regarded as one of the best health care centers in the world under the auspices of Dr. Alan Fishman, chief of nuclear medicine at the MGH MGH Massachusetts General Hospital MGH McGraw-Hill Companies MGH Montreal General Hospital (Montreal, Canada) MGH Monumenta Germania Historica MGH May Go Home MGH Minneapolis General Hospital . "The results from this study show that Altropane is a safe, accurate, and convenient agent to image the dopamine transporter system in the brain. Quantitative data on the number of dopamine transporters in the affected region of the brain can be obtained within 90 minutes of injection," said Marc E. Lanser, M.D., chief scientific officer of BLSI. "In this study, the use of Altropane together with SPECT SPECT single-photon emission computed tomography. SPECT abbr. single photon emission computed tomography SPECT, n See single photon emission computer tomography. brain scanning demonstrated a greater than 70 percent loss of dopamine transporters in patients with mild clinical disease. Patients with more severe disease were shown to have had an even greater loss. In one patient in whom the diagnosis of Parkinson's Disease was in dispute, physicians using Altropane demonstrated that the patient did not in fact have Parkinson's Disease. These gratifying grat·i·fy tr.v. grat·i·fied, grat·i·fy·ing, grat·i·fies 1. To please or satisfy: His achievement gratified his father. See Synonyms at please. 2. results will enable us to move forward with the clinical development program with great confidence." BLSI is developing novel treatments for cancer, autoimmune diseases, and central nervous system disorders Nervous system disorders A satisfactory classification of diseases of the nervous system should include not only the type of reaction (congenital malformation, infection, trauma, neoplasm, vascular diseases, and degenerative, metabolic, toxic, or deficiency . BLSI's products in pre-clinical development or in clinical trials include, among others, THERAFECTIN(R) (amiprilose HCl), a potential treatment for rheumatoid arthritis; Cartilage-derived Inhibitor (CDI CDI compact disc interactive: a system for storing a mix of software, data, audio, and compressed video for interactive use under processor control ), a natural anti-angiogenesis factor to treat solid tumors; Axogenesis Factor 1 (AF-1), a novel central nervous system growth factor; and transcription factors that control the expression of molecules associated with autoimmune disease and allergies. CONTACT: Boston Life Sciences Inc., Boston Marc E. Lanser, M.D., Chief Scientific Officer, 617/425-0200 or H.L. Lanzet Inc., Oceanside Gerald Ortsman, DeeDee Lanzet, Investor Relations, 212/687-0061 |
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