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ORGANIC SPECTROSCOPY

Read all about Organic Spectroscopy on ORGANIC SPECTROSCOPY INTERNATIONAL 

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DR ANTHONY MELVIN CRASTO Ph.D

DR ANTHONY MELVIN CRASTO Ph.D

DR ANTHONY MELVIN CRASTO, Born in Mumbai in 1964 and graduated from Mumbai University, Completed his Ph.D from ICT, 1991,Matunga, Mumbai, India, in Organic Chemistry, The thesis topic was Synthesis of Novel Pyrethroid Analogues, Currently he is working with AFRICURE PHARMA, ROW2TECH, NIPER-G, Department of Pharmaceuticals, Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers, Govt. of India as ADVISOR, earlier assignment was with GLENMARK LIFE SCIENCES LTD, as CONSUlTANT, Retired from GLENMARK in Jan2022 Research Centre as Principal Scientist, Process Research (bulk actives) at Mahape, Navi Mumbai, India. Total Industry exp 32 plus yrs, Prior to joining Glenmark, he has worked with major multinationals like Hoechst Marion Roussel, now Sanofi, Searle India Ltd, now RPG lifesciences, etc. He has worked with notable scientists like Dr K Nagarajan, Dr Ralph Stapel, Prof S Seshadri, etc, He did custom synthesis for major multinationals in his career like BASF, Novartis, Sanofi, etc., He has worked in Discovery, Natural products, Bulk drugs, Generics, Intermediates, Fine chemicals, Neutraceuticals, GMP, Scaleups, etc, he is now helping millions, has 9 million plus hits on Google on all Organic chemistry websites. His friends call him Open superstar worlddrugtracker. His New Drug Approvals, Green Chemistry International, All about drugs, Eurekamoments, Organic spectroscopy international, etc in organic chemistry are some most read blogs He has hands on experience in initiation and developing novel routes for drug molecules and implementation them on commercial scale over a 32 PLUS year tenure till date Feb 2023, Around 35 plus products in his career. He has good knowledge of IPM, GMP, Regulatory aspects, he has several International patents published worldwide . He has good proficiency in Technology transfer, Spectroscopy, Stereochemistry, Synthesis, Polymorphism etc., He suffered a paralytic stroke/ Acute Transverse mylitis in Dec 2007 and is 90 %Paralysed, He is bound to a wheelchair, this seems to have injected feul in him to help chemists all around the world, he is more active than before and is pushing boundaries, He has 100 million plus hits on Google, 2.5 lakh plus connections on all networking sites, 100 Lakh plus views on dozen plus blogs, 227 countries, 7 continents, He makes himself available to all, contact him on +91 9323115463, email amcrasto@gmail.com, Twitter, @amcrasto , He lives and will die for his family, 90% paralysis cannot kill his soul., Notably he has 38 lakh plus views on New Drug Approvals Blog in 227 countries......https://newdrugapprovals.wordpress.com/ , He appreciates the help he gets from one and all, Friends, Family, Glenmark, Readers, Wellwishers, Doctors, Drug authorities, His Contacts, Physiotherapist, etc He has total of 32 International and Indian awards

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Welcome to Bioinfomedical.com


http://www.bioinfomedical.com/index.php

Dr. Rafael B. Boritzer

Prof. Dr. Rafael Boritzer

P.O.Box 88355, Honolulu, Hawaii 96830 U.S.A.

boritzer@bioinfomedical.com

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we are marketers of non-branded recombinant proteins with a primary mission of high quality, low priced material for encouraging biopharma research and development outside of North America. We try to integrate our supply services with education of our clients’ with industry videos and information.

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Antibody lipid treatments enter final furlong


Antibody lipid treatments enter final furlong

A tiny pain-free jab every two weeks could be the future of cholesterol-lowering for high-risk patients, according to clinical researchers gathered in Amsterdam for the European Society of Cardiology congress.

Eli Roth at the University of Cincinnati said that two companies are currently neck and neck in the race to bring the first PCSK9 antibody to market. Partners Sanofi and Regeneron may have the edge, with Phase III data on their fully human monoclonal antibody alirocumab slated to be presented before the end of the year, while the chief competition comes from Amgen with its antibody AMG 145, said Dr Roth. Both antibodies can be delivered via subcutaneous auto-injectors, which many patients say they prefer to taking daily pills, he added.

http://www.pharmatimes.com/Article/13-09-02/Antibody_lipid_treatments_enter_final_furlong.aspx

Alirocumab is a human monoclonal antibody designed for the treatment ofhypercholesterolemia.[1]

This drug was discovered by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and is being co-developed by Regeron and Sanofi.

THERAPEUTIC CLAIM Treatment of hypercholesterolemia
CHEMICAL NAMES
1. Immunoglobulin G1, anti-(human neural apoptosis-regulated proteinase 1) (human
REGN727 heavy chain), disulfide with human REGN727 κ-chain, dimer
2. Immunoglobulin G1, anti-(human proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9
(EC=3.4.21.-, neural apoptosis-regulated convertase 1, proprotein convertase 9,
subtilisin/kexin-like protease PC9)); human monoclonal REGN727 des-448-
lysine(CH3-K107)-1 heavy chain (221-220′)-disulfide with human monoclonal
REGN727  light chain dimer (227-227”:230-230”)-bisdisulfide
MOLECULAR FORMULA C6472H9996N1736O2032S42
MOLECULAR WEIGHT 146.0 kDa

SPONSOR Regeneron Pharmaceuticals
CODE DESIGNATION REGN727, SAR236553
CAS REGISTRY NUMBER 1245916-14-6

  1.  Statement On A Nonproprietary Name Adopted By The USAN Council – Alirocumab,American Medical Association.

Drug Developers Need to More Fully Identify And Address Root Causes Of R&D Inefficiency, According To Tufts Center For The Study Of Drug Development


Boston, MA–(Marketwire) – While patent expirations on many top selling medicines are spurring the research-based drug industry to embrace new development paradigms to replenish sparse R&D pipelines, drug developers need to more fully identify and address root causes of R&D inefficiency, according to the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development.

read all at

http://www.drugdiscoveryonline.com/doc/drug-developers-need-to-more-fully-identify-and-address-root-causes-0001

The Cost Of Creating A New Drug Now $5 Billion, Pushing Big Pharma To Change


Susan Desmond-Hellmann

There’s one factor that, as much as anything else, determines how many medicines are invented, what diseases they treat, and, to an extent, what price patients must pay for them: the cost of inventing and developing a new drug, a cost driven by the uncomfortable fact than 95% of the experimental medicines that are studied in humans fail to be both effective and safe.

A new analysis conducted at Forbes puts grim numbers on these costs. A company hoping to get a single drug to market can expect to have spent $350 million before the medicine is available for sale. In part because so many drugs fail, large pharmaceutical companies that are working on dozens of drug projects at once spend $5 billion per new medicine.

read all at

http://www.forbes.com/sites/matthewherper/2013/08/11/how-the-staggering-cost-of-inventing-new-drugs-is-shaping-the-future-of-medicine/

How Much They Cost: R&D Spending Per New Drug

Company Number of new drugs 10 year R&D spending ($MIL) R&D per drug ($MIL)
1 Abbott 1 13183 13183
2 Sanofi 6 60768 10128
3 AstraZeneca 4 38245 9561
4 Hoffmann-La Roche 8 70928 8866
5 Pfizer 10 77786 7779
6 Wyeth 3 22702 7567
7 Eli Lilly 4 26710 6678
8 Bayer 5 33118 6624
9 Schering-Plough 3 18845 6282
10 Novartis 10 60727 6073
11 Takeda 4 24132 6033
12 Merck&Co 9 49133 5459
13 GlaxoSmithKline 11 57595 5236
14 J&J 13 67624 5202
15 Novo Nordisk 2 9251 4625
16 UCB 1 4325 4325
17 Yamanouchi 1 4321 4321
18 Fujisawa 1 4286 4286
19 Amgen 5 21350 4270
20 Astellas 3 12582 4194
21 Shionogi 1 3854 3854
22 Celgene 2 7193 3596
23 Bristol-Myers Squibb 9 30352 3372
24 Eisai 4 11534 2883
25 Teva 2 5763 2881
26 Biogen Idec 4 9470 2368
27 Vertex 2 4140 2070
28 Sunovion 1 1967 1967
29 Human Genome Sciences 1 1954 1954
30 Elan 1 1903 1903
31 Gilead 3 5527 1842
32 Exelixis 1 1789 1789
33 Lundbeck 2 3527 1763
34 Millennium 1 1593 1593
35 Genentech 4 6277 1569
36 Allergan 1 1559 1559
37 Baxter 3 4627 1542
38 Ipsen 1 1459 1459
39 Forest 4 5184 1296
40 Cephalon 1 1221 1221
41 Onyx 1 1219 1219
42 Sepracor 1 1170 1170
43 Alcon 1 1133 1133
44 Theravance 1 1010 1010
45 Genzyme 5 4814 963
46 Shire 4 3827 957
47 Arena 1 934 934
48 Watson 1 930 930
49 Adolor 1 877 877
50 Valeant 1 844 844
51 Schwarz 2 1545 772
52 NPS 1 756 756
53 Regeneron 3 2149 716
54 Affymax 1 660 660
55 Seattle Genetics 1 610 610
56 CV Therapeutics 1 599 599
57 ImClone 1 517 517
58 Dendreon 1 509 509
59 Alexion 1 490 490
60 The Medicines Company 1 455 455
61 Ariad 1 444 444
62 OSI 1 402 402
63 Talecris 1 396 396
64 Progenics 1 356 356
65 Actelion 1 346 346
66 Savient 1 339 339
67 Praecis 1 311 311
68 Vivus 1 309 309
69 MGI 1 294 294
70 Vicuron 1 286 286
71 Salix 2 560 280
72 Idenix 1 280 280
73 Mylan 3 762 254
74 Discovery Laboratories 1 228 228
75 Indevus 1 222 222
76 Cubist 1 220 220
77 Acorda 1 185 185
78 Ista 1 171 171
79 Optimer 1 171 171
80 Theratechnologies 1 164 164
81 MediGene 1 155 155
82 Vanda 1 150 150
83 Eyetech 1 144 144
84 ThromboGenics 1 137 137
85 BioMarin 3 403 134
86 Protalix 1 125 125
87 Amarin 1 122 122
88 Insmed 1 118 118
89 NeurogesX 1 89 89
90 Hyperion 1 87 87
91 Cypress Bioscience 1 82 82
92 New River 1 79 79
93 Aegerion 1 74 74
94 Sucampo 1 62 62
95 Fibrocell 1 62 62
96 Tercica 1 49 49
97 Pharmion 1 47 47
98 Kamada 1 37 37
99 Lev 1 26 26
100 OMRIX 1 15 15

Big boost for Incyte as Jakafi shines in PhII


ruxolitinib

Top-line results from a Phase II trial showed that its JAK inhibitor Jakafi (ruxolitinib), in combination with Roche’s Xeloda (capecitabine), improved survival in some patients with recurrent or treatment refractory advanced pancreatic cancer

http://www.pharmatimes.com/Article/13-08-

22/Big_boost_for_Incyte_as_Jakafi_shines_in_PhII.aspx

Ruxolitinib (trade names Jakafi and Jakavi, by Incyte Pharmaceuticals and Novartis) is a drug for the treatment of intermediate or high-risk myelofibrosis, a type of bone marrow cancer.It is also being investigated for the treatment of other types of cancer (such as lymphomas and pancreatic cancer), for polycythemia vera, and for plaque psoriasis.
The phase III Controlled Myelofibrosis Study with Oral JAK Inhibitor-I (COMFORT-I) and COMFORT-II trials showed significant benefits by reducing spleen size, relieving debilitating symptoms, and improving overall survival.

Mechanism of action

Ruxolitinib is a Janus kinase inhibitor with selectivity for subtypes 1 and 2 of this enzyme.
Side effects

Immunologic side effects have included herpes zoster (1.9%) and case reports of opportunistic infections.[10] Metabolic side effects have included weight gain (7.1%). Laboratory abnormalities have included alanine transaminase (ALT) abnormalities (25.2%), aspartate transaminase (AST) abnormalities (17.4%), and elevated cholesterol levels (16.8%).
Legal status

In November 2011, ruxolitinib was approved by the USFDA for the treatment of intermediate or high-risk myelofibrosis based on results of the COMFORT-I and COMFORT-II Trials.

Some analysts believe this to be a potential blockbuster drug.[3] As of the end of March 2012, and according to an Incyte spokesman, approximately 1000 physicians had prescribed the drug in the United States, out of a total 6500 hematologists and oncologists nationwide.

The US Food and Drug Administration had approved Incyte’s Jakafi (ruxolitinib) to treat patients with the bone marrow disease myelofibrosis (MF).  Jakafi is the first and only drug granted license specifically for the treatment of the rare blood cancer.

Jakafi for Myelofibrosis

Jakafi approved by FDA to treat rare bone marrow disease

Posted By Edward Su On November 17th, 2011

MF is a rare, potentially life-threatening blood cancer with limited treatment methods. Patients with the bone marrow disoder, characterized by bone marrow failure, enlarged spleen (splenomegaly), suffer from the symptoms of fatigue, night sweats and pruritus, poor quality of life, weight loss and shortened survival. The US drug firm Incyte estimates the disease affects about 16,000-18,500 people in the USA. Currently,  the disease is treated with chemotherapy or bone marrow transplant.

Incyte’s Jakafi, the first drug to reach market from the Wilmington-based drug company, was approved by the FDA as a twice-a-day pill for the treatment of patients with intermediate or high-risk myelofibrosis (MF), including primary MF, post-polycythemia vera MF and post-essential thrombocythemia MF.  The US regulators reviewed Jakafi under its priority review program for important new therapies.

The approval of  Jakafi was based on the results from two clinical studies involved 528 patients with the disease. Patients in the Jakafi treatment arm experienced a significant reduction in the size of their spleen as well as a 50 percent decrease in symptoms, including pain, discomfort and night sweats.

Jakafi, generically known as ruxolitinib,  works by blocking JAK1 and JAK2 enzymes associated with the disease. The company has co-developed the drug with Novartis as part of their collaboration signed in 2009. The Swiss drug firm has the rights to market Jakafi in other countries.

“The availability of Jakafi is a significant medical advancement for people living with myelofibrosis, a debilitating disease,” said Paul A. Friedman, M.D., President and Chief Executive Officer of Incyte. “This milestone marks a tremendous achievement for Incyte because a scientific discovery from our research laboratories has become the first JAK inhibitor to reach the market and provide a clinical benefit to patients.”

Richard Pazdur, director of the Office of Hematology and Oncology Drug Products in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said that Jakafi “represents another example of an increasing trend in oncology where a detailed scientific understanding of the mechanisms of a disease allows a drug to be directed toward specific molecular pathways”.

Incyte says Jakafi will be available next week, and the drug will cost $7,000 per month, or $84,000 for a year’s supply for insured patients. The company plans to provide Jakafi free to uninsured patients and will offer co-pay assistance to patients with financial need.

(JAK1, JAK2) inhibitor, developed by the Incyte Corporation, trade name Jakafi.
Ruxolitinib synthetic route as shown below. 4 – bromo-pyrazole ( 1 ) with ethyl vinyl ether ( 2 ) to protect, and then with a Grignard reagent to a halogen – exchanged with isopropyl magnesiumpinacol ester ( 3 ) quenching to obtain 4 . Compound 5 is obtained consisting of hydrogen is protected 6 , and then with a boronic acid ester 4 Suzuki coupling occurs under acidic conditions after removal of the protecting group pyrazolyl 7 , 7 and α, β-unsaturated aldehyde 8 chiral catalyst 9 of under the catalysis of asymmetric Michael addition to give ( R ) -10 (90% EE). ( R) -10 , after reaction with ammonia to obtain an imine oxidation with iodine nitrile 11 , respectively, with different conditions for the final removal of the protecting group to afford Ruxolitinib.

Ruxolitinib <wbr> 2011 年 11 月 FDA approved drugs treat myelofibrosis

Biotech portfolio update – 2012 summary and 2013 outlook


read all here

http://www.orf-blog.com/biotech-portfolio-update-%E2%80%93-2012-summary-and-2013-outlook/

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A BRIEF REVIEW ON TREATMENT & PREVENTION OF CANCER


 

ABSTRACT


The rate of cancer rise is dramatic, doubling in the last 30 years. Furthermore, of the estimated 560,000 cancer victims who would die in 1997, most of them could have prevented their illness had they paid attention to some simple lifestyle factors.

Although the number of cancer deaths continues to rise each year in the U.S., the per capita cancer mortality rate has just recently started to decline. This celebrated small decline was first announced by the National Cancer Institute in late 1996, but a careful retrospective review of the data indicated that the per capita cancer death rate peaked in 1991 and has ever so slowly declined thereafter.

What was the reason for this decline? Not improved cancer treatments, but cancer prevention itself emerges as the cause for this good news. A national commitment to the prevention of cancer, largely replacing reliance on hopes for universal cures.

read all at

http://www.pharmatutor.org/articles/brief-review-on-treatment-prevention-of-cancer

Personalized Tumor Vaccine Hits Phase 2


Bevacizumab

bevacizumab

str ref———-http://www.kidneycancerinstitute.com/Bevacizumab.html

Northwestern Medicine recently joined a landmark clinical trial to investigate if a vaccine made from a patient’s own brain tumor is effective in slowing tumor progression and extending survival. The randomized phase 2 trial will study how well giving the study vaccine with or without Avastin (bevacizumab) works in treating patients with recurrent glioblastoma multiforme (GBM).

http://www.dddmag.com/news/2013/08/personalized-tumor-vaccine-hits-phase-2?et_cid=3425506&et_rid=523035093&type=cta

 

Bevacizumab
(Avastin, Genentech Inc.- Year approved:2009)
Avastin (or bevacizumab to the scientific community) is a humanised monoclonal antibody that is directed against all biologically active forms of VEGF. Antibodies are molecules that are typically a normal part of the human immune system. An antibody is meant to bind to a very specific target which is then typically destroyed and removed by the body. Avastin is an antibody that binds VEGF and acts to block its action.
Bevacizumab was one of the first antiangiogenic agents to demonstrate activity against metastatic kidney cancer. Bevacizumab is administered intravenously every two weeks. On July 31, 2009, the FDA granted approval for the use of Avastin in combination with interferon-? for the treatment of patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma. The approval was based on results published in the journal Lancet in 2007. In this double-blind phase III trial 649 patients with metastatic kidney cancer who had undergone nephrectomy, were randomized to either bevacizumab plus Interferon-? or placebo plus Interferon-? as a first-line treatment. Median progression-free survival of patients was significantly improved in those receiving the combination treatment including Bevacizumab and Interferon-? compared to the control group (10.2 vs 5.4 months). Response rates were also significantly improved in the Bevacizumab and Interferon-? groups (31% vs 13%). The most common severe (grade 3) toxicity was fatigue: 12% in the bevacizumab and IFN arm versus 8% in the control arm.

A second multicenter phase III trial which was performed in 2008 and which was conducted in the United States and Canada, was nearly identical in design with the exception that it lacked a placebo element and did not require prior nephrectomy. In this second study, the average progression-free survival was 8.5 months in patients receiving The combination of Bevacizumab and Interferon-? compared to 5.2 months for patients receiving Interferon-? therapy alone. The overall response rate was in favour of the combination group (25.5% vs 13.1%). However, both studies failed to show any significant difference regarding overall survival between the combination of Bevacizumab and Interferon-? versus Interferon-? alone (18.3 vs 17.4 months).

Bevacizumab (trade name AvastinGenentech/Roche) is an angiogenesis inhibitor, a drug that slows the growth of new blood vessels. It is licensed to treat various cancers, including colorectal, lung, breast (outside the USA), glioblastoma (USA only), kidney and ovarian.

Bevacizumab is a humanized monoclonal antibody that inhibits vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF-A). VEGF-A is a chemical signal that stimulates angiogenesis in a variety of diseases, especially in cancer. Bevacizumab was the first clinically availableangiogenesis inhibitor in the United States.

Bevacizumab was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for certainmetastatic cancers. It received its first approval in 2004, for combination use with standardchemotherapy for metastatic colon cancer.It has since been approved for use in certain lung cancers, renal cancers, and glioblastoma multiforme of the brain.

At one point bevacizumab was approved for breast cancer by the FDA, but the approval was revoked on 18 November 2011. The approval for breast cancer was revoked because, although there was evidence that it slowed progression of metastatic breast cancer, there was no evidence that it extended life or improved quality of life, and it caused adverse effects including severe high blood pressure and hemorrhaging. In 2008, the FDA gave bevacizumab provisional approval for metastatic breast cancer, subject to further studies. The FDA’s advisory panel had recommended against approval. In July 2010, after new studies failed to show a significant benefit, the FDA’s advisory panel recommended against the indication for advanced breast cancer. Genentech requested a hearing, which was granted in June 2011. The FDA ruled to withdraw the breast cancer indication in November 2011. FDA approval is required for Genentech to market a drug for that indication. Doctors may sometimes prescribe it for that indication, although insurance companies are less likely to pay for it. The drug remains approved for breast cancer use in other countries including Australia.

Clinical trials are underway for many other indications including ovarian cancer, pediatric osteosarcoma, and certain non-malignant eye diseases. In the curative setting (adjuvant therapy), clinical studies are underway in breast cancer and lung cancer.

FDA Approves Investigational MS Trial


The stem cell research division of the Tisch MS Research Center of New York announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved autologous, mesenchymal stem cell-derived neural progenitor cells (MSC-NPs) as an Investigational New Drug (IND) for an open label, phase 1 clinical trial in the treatment of multiple sclerosis.

http://www.dddmag.com/news/2013/08/fda-approves-investigational-ms-trial?et_cid=3425506&et_rid=523035093&type=cta

 



Actavis submits ANDAs for two more generic version of Bayer’s Safyral and Fresenius Kabi’s Diprivan (propofol) injection


Actavis submits ANDAs for two more generic version of

Bayer’s Safyral and

 

 

Fresenius Kabi’s Diprivan (propofol) injection

 

Actavis has filed for US approval for generic versions of a contraceptive and a sedative/anaesthetic.http://www.gabionline.net/Generics/News/Actavis-submits-ANDAs-for-two-more-generics