Could Dasatinib be called " Sprycel?" - See news release below:

Bristol Sprycel For Gleevec-Resistant Leukemia To Get Committee Review
At June ASCO Meeting

FDA will take its Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee on the road to
review Bristol-Myers Squibb's Sprycel (dasatinib) for the treatment
of resistant leukemias.

The meeting will take place on June 2 in Atlanta, Ga. on the first day
of the American Society for Clinical Oncology annual meeting. The ASCO
meeting runs June 2-6. Many of the committee members and FDA oncology
reviewers regularly attend the meeting, as do Bristol representatives.

FDA will give the committee members a break, as they are likely to have
time constraints during the ASCO meeting; the agency is only dedicating
a half-day to the review, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Bristol is seeking accelerated approval for dasatinib for the
"treatment of adults with chronic, accelerated, or blast phase
chronic myeloid leukemia with resistance or intolerance to prior
therapy, including imatinib" (Novartis' Gleevec).

The company is also seeking an indication for "treatment of adults
with Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and
lymphoid blast chronic myeloid leukemia with resistance or intolerance
to prior therapy."

Bristol submitted the NDA for Sprycel on Dec. 28. FDA is giving the
application a priority review, which would give the product a June 28.
user fee deadline.

The submission is primarily based on Phase II data from 1,000
Gleevec-resistant or intolerant patient with CML in various phases of
disease.

According to data presented at the American Society for Hematology in
December, 32% of the 74 patients with myeloid blast phase had a major
hematologic response with dasatinib and 24% of patients experienced a
complete hematologic response.

In 107 accelerated phase patients, dasatinib showed a 59% major
hematologic response rate with 33% of patients experiencing a complete
hematologic response.

The response was even higher in chronic phase patients who were
intolerant or resistant to Gleevec. Among 59 intolerant patients, 97%
had a complete hematologic response. The response rate for 127
resistant chronic phase patients was 87%.

Complete cytogenetic response rates for the myeloid blast and
accelerated phase patients were in the 30% range, while 22% of chronic
phase patients resistant to imatinib had a complete cytogenetic
response; 56% of intolerant chronic phase patients had a complete
cytogenetic response.

The advisory committee will have to determine if the Phase II data on
hematologic and cytogenetic responses are enough to predict a clinical
benefit for dasatinib, such as prolonged survival in CML patients.

Bristol estimates that 15%-20% of patients treated for CML do not
achieve major cytogenetic responses to Gleevec within the first 12
months and 5%-10% develop resistance.

Dasatinib is an oral multi-target kinase inhibitor, which, Bristol
reports, has a pre-clinical potency greater than imatinib.


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