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lurkingforacure 10-28-2016 10:01 AM

Frustrated on priority with Tasigna/nilotinib
 
Has anyone else noticed how slow the Tagisna trial process for PD is moving but how fast it is moving for Alz? This is so frustrating! Moussa's work at Georgetown was done on PD, he's talked about a bigger trial for PD, Fox has talked about a Tagisna trial for PD, as have others...but these trials have gotten pushed back for over a year. Even now I cannot find where the trial sites will be, when recruitment will begin, what the criteria will be, nothing.

Meanwhile, the FDA has apparently approved a clinical trial of Tasigna for Alz. and the trial is schedule to begin THIS YEAR:

Alzheimer's Study Funded by ADDF to Test Cancer Treatment in Patients

What's up with this?

Tupelo3 10-28-2016 10:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lurkingforacure (Post 1227464)
Has anyone else noticed how slow the Tagisna trial process for PD is moving but how fast it is moving for Alz? This is so frustrating! Moussa's work at Georgetown was done on PD, he's talked about a bigger trial for PD, Fox has talked about a Tagisna trial for PD, as have others...but these trials have gotten pushed back for over a year. Even now I cannot find where the trial sites will be, when recruitment will begin, what the criteria will be, nothing.

Meanwhile, the FDA has apparently approved a clinical trial of Tasigna for Alz. and the trial is schedule to begin THIS YEAR:

Alzheimer's Study Funded by ADDF to Test Cancer Treatment in Patients

What's up with this?

Yes, it is very frustrating. If you read my previous posts about this you'll get the story. Basically, GU was able to secure funding from an AZ foundation while they were having difficulty funding a new PD trial. They still say that they intend to conduct a PD study, however, I don't know that they have the funds yet. Regarding the MJFF et al trials, that was never supposed to happen until later in 2017. It is way to early to be looking for trial sites as they are still designing the trial. There is no information yet on inclusion/exclusion criteria. If GU finds the money, that trial will likely commence earlier than MJFF.

There is also a third trial that you may want to follow. A small biotech company, Inhibikase Therapeutics, has received FDA approval to begin a double-blinded, placebo-controlled trials for Nilotinib and Dasatinib (Sprycel - Bristol-Myers). The trials will try to evaluate the ability of both drugs (vs placebo) to slow or reverse progression in Stage 2 and 3 PD patients. It will be held at one test site over a 6 month period.

The reason Inhibikase is conducting the studies is really more of a proof of concept for two new drugs that they are researching. They are developing two Abelson tyrosine inhibitors that are as much as 60 times more potent than the ones currently on the market (Nilotinib, Dasatinib, Gleevec, etc.).

lurkingforacure 10-28-2016 07:36 PM

Thanks:)
 
I guess that's my point: all these PD orgs out there, many of them huge, and not one of them could fund a trial for Tasigna? They couldn't team up if they didn't want to put all of those research dollars in one basket?

The trials have already been pushed back once that I read about, who knows what really happens behind closed research doors.

I have read politics/power were involved between the Fox/GMU that caused that split, and thus we lost valuable time with them doing a PD trial, which is even more frustrating.

We are following the Gleevec/Tasigna second generation drugs, thanks!

Tupelo3 10-28-2016 08:54 PM

[QUOTE=lurkingforacure;1227497]I guess that's my point: all these PD orgs out there, many of them huge, and not one of them could fund a trial for Tasigna? They couldn't team up if they didn't want to put all of those research dollars in one basket?

QUOTE]

Feel the same as you, couldn't agree more.........

Blackfeather 10-30-2016 06:49 PM

Another company that you may want to follow is Proclara biosciences. They claim to have a single drug that eliminates misfolded protein in multiple Neuro illnesses. They are currently in phase 1a clinical trial. They used to be known as macrophage.

Proclara Biosciences

Tupelo3 10-30-2016 07:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Blackfeather (Post 1227619)
Another company that you may want to follow is Proclara biosciences. They claim to have a single drug that eliminates misfolded protein in multiple Neuro illnesses. They are currently in phase 1a clinical trial. They used to be known as macrophage.

Proclara Biosciences

Yes, Proclara is definitly a company to watch. Their technology is world class. Actually, their original name was NeuroPhage. They along with AffiRis and Prothena are the three most advanced immunotherapy therapy companies with vaccine in active trials.

TexasTom 10-31-2016 07:40 AM

USA based:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/resul...&Search=Search

Parkinson's Disease | Therapies in Development for Parkinson's Disease

FOX TRIAL FINDER : Parkinson's Disease Clinical Trials

sim00 10-31-2016 09:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lurkingforacure (Post 1227464)
Has anyone else noticed how slow the Tagisna trial process for PD is moving but how fast it is moving for Alz? This is so frustrating! Moussa's work at Georgetown was done on PD, he's talked about a bigger trial for PD, Fox has talked about a Tagisna trial for PD, as have others...but these trials have gotten pushed back for over a year. Even now I cannot find where the trial sites will be, when recruitment will begin, what the criteria will be, nothing.

Meanwhile, the FDA has apparently approved a clinical trial of Tasigna for Alz. and the trial is schedule to begin THIS YEAR:

Alzheimer's Study Funded by ADDF to Test Cancer Treatment in Patients

What's up with this?

Hi lurking,
this is an interesting article about that:
α-Synuclein binds to TOM2 and inhibits mitochondrial protein import in Parkinson’s disease | Science Translational Medicine

curem 12-03-2016 05:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lurkingforacure (Post 1227464)
Meanwhile, the FDA has apparently approved a clinical trial of Tasigna for Alz. and the trial is schedule to begin THIS YEAR

If Tasigna gets approved for Alzheimer's as both safe and effective, if preliminary trials show success with Parkinson's, could it then be prescribed as an off-label drug for Parkinson's?

Tupelo3 12-03-2016 11:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by curem (Post 1230232)
If Tasigna gets approved for Alzheimer's as both safe and effective, if preliminary trials show success with Parkinson's, could it then be prescribed as an off-label drug for Parkinson's?

Actually, it can be prescribed right now off-label. The FDA only controls drug approval, not drug prescribing. Doctors are free to prescribe any drug for any reason they believe is medically appropriate (in the USA, not sure about other countries). Of course, it does open the doctor to more liability risk. Also, insurance companies are unlikely to cover the cost of the prescription.

If you don't want to wait for the end of the phase 2 trials, or can't find a doctor to prescribe off label, or can't afford this expensive drug, yet still want to take it, then consider volunteering for the multi- center study next year. If you qualify, you can get the drug for free and properly monitored (assuming you don't get the placebo.....). You'll also be helping the whole PD community by moving the science forward.


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