WEST HAVEN, CONNECTICUT -- August 7th 2013 -- NanoViricides, Inc. (OTC BB: NNVC) (the "Company") announced today that DengueCide™, its drug candidate for the treatment of dengue and dengue hemorrhagic fever, has been officially designated as an orphan drug by the US FDA.
This orphan drug designation qualifies NanoViricides for certain tax credits and marketing incentives under the Orphan Drug Act. In addition, the Company will qualify for the waiver of certain FDA fees when it files the New Drug Application (NDA) for DengueCide with the FDA. Further, the Company will also be eligible for a “Priority Review Voucher” (PRV) from the US FDA when the Company files a NDA for DengueCide.
“Now we intend to accelerate our dengue drug development programs to take advantage of these benefits,” said Eugene Seymour, MD, MPH, CEO of the Company. DengueCide is in pre-clinical development at present. If the pre-clinical development is successful, the Company will need to file an “Investigational New Drug” (IND) application to the US FDA and perform human clinical trials. If the human clinical trials are successful, then the Company has to file a NDA to the FDA to obtain approval to market the drug. There is no guarantee that DengueCide will successfully result in an NDA or a marketable drug product.
If the Company receives a Priority Review Voucher, it can be applied to accelerate the review of another one of our own drugs or it can be sold to another pharmaceutical company for a consideration. Priority review means that the FDA aims to render a decision on the NDA in 6 months. In contrast, the FDA aims to complete a standard review in about 10 months, and it often takes even longer. The estimated economic value of a PRV depends upon the drug class, and could be as high as a few hundred million dollars, according to Duke economists (Ridley et al. 2006; Grabowski et al. 2009). (https://faculty.fuqua.duke.edu/~dbr1/voucher/).
The Company has already filed a letter of intent as required for filing of an orphan drug designation application for DengueCide with the European Medicines Agency (EMA). A committee has already been established by the EMA to perform the evaluation. The criteria employed for orphan drug designation at the EMA are somewhat different from those employed by the US FDA. The benefits of an EMA orphan drug designation are different from those of the US FDA orphan designation. There is no guarantee that the Company will receive an orphan designation for DengueCide under the EMA.
The Company engaged the consulting firm Coté Orphan Consulting (COC), headed by Dr. Tim Coté, to assist with our DengueCide orphan drug applications to both the US FDA and the EMA.
DengueCide is a nanoviricide® that has shown very high effectiveness in an animal model of dengue virus infection. These animal studies were conducted in the laboratory of Dr. Eva Harris, Professor of Public Health and Infectious Diseases at the University of California, Berkeley. Professor Harris has developed a mouse model of antibody-dependent-enhancement (ADE) of dengue infection that simulates dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF/DHSS) using a special laboratory mouse strain called AG129. In humans DHF/DHSS is associated with a high fatality rate. In this model, infection with a dengue virus, when the mice are left untreated, is 100% fatal. In contrast, in the same study, animals treated with NanoViricides' DengueCide achieved an unprecedented 50% survival rate.
There is currently neither an effective drug treatment nor a vaccine for dengue virus infection. No vaccine or drug candidate has succeeded in clinical trials towards approval as of date in spite of significant development efforts. Several dengue virus vaccine clinical trials are ongoing. Previously, a drug called poly-IC-lC received an orphan designation in 2003 for dengue treatment. This drug is supposed to act as an immune booster and is in several clinical trials. Three additional treatments for dengue fever are found in a search of the clinical trials database (http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/results?term=dengue&pg=5&show_xprt=Y). These include chloroquine, balapiravir (Roche), and celgosivir.
The Company continues to advance its injectable and oral FluCide™ broad-spectrum anti-influenza drug candidates towards clinical trials. Both of these drug candidates have shown extremely high effectiveness and substantial superiority to Tamiflu®, the standard of care, in the unrelated influenza virus types H1N1 and H3N2 in a high lethality animal model.
About Dengue and Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever
Dengue fever, a very old disease, has reemerged in the past 20 years with an expanded geographic distribution of both the viruses and the mosquito vectors, increased epidemic activity, the development of hyper-endemicity (the co-circulation of multiple serotypes), and the emergence of dengue hemorrhagic fever in new geographic regions. In 2013, this mosquito-borne disease is one of the most important tropical infectious diseases globally, with an estimated 400 million cases of dengue fever, over one million cases of dengue hemorrhagic fever, and 50,000-100,000 deaths annually. Dengue virus occurs in four primary serotypes. Although the disease is endemic in many tropical parts of the world, it is considered an orphan disease in the USA and Europe. (From Clinical Microbiology Reviews).
NanoViricides Pipeline
NanoViricides is developing broad-spectrum anti-influenza drugs as part of its rich drug pipeline. The Company believes that its FluCide™ drug candidates will be effective against most if not all influenza viruses, including the H7N9 bird flu, H3N2 or H1N1 epidemic viruses, H5N1 bird flu, seasonal influenzas, as well as novel influenza viruses. This is because FluCide is based on the Company’s biomimetic technology, mimicking the natural sialic acid receptors for the influenza virus on the surface of a nanoviricide® polymeric micelle. It is important to note that all influenza viruses bind to the sialic acid receptors, even if they rapidly mutate. The FluCide drug candidates have already shown strong effectiveness against H1N1 and H3N2 influenza viruses in highly lethal animal models. The injectable FluCide drug candidates have shown 1,000X greater viral load reduction as compared to oseltamivir (Tamiflu®), the current standard of care, in a highly lethal influenza infection animal model. The Company believes that these animal model results should translate readily into humans.
NanoViricides has also developed an oral drug candidate against influenza. This oral version is also dramatically more effective than TamiFlu in the animals given a lethal influenza virus infection. This oral FluCide may be the very first nanomedicine that is effective when taken by mouth.
In addition, NanoViricides has developed drug candidates against Dengue, HIV/AIDS, Herpes, and Ocular Viral Diseases that have shown strong effectiveness in relevant animal and/or cell culture models.
About Cote Orphan Consulting - Expertly Guiding Orphans Through the FDA
COC was established by Tim Coté, MD, MPH, as a consulting service to pharmaceutical companies working in the area of rare and neglected diseases. Dr. Coté was the Director of the Office of Orphan Product Development (OOPD) at the FDA, from 2007 to 2011. In this role heading OOPD at the Agency, he was responsible for the implementation of the Orphan Drug Act, a system of grants and drug development incentives designed to create therapies for 6,000+ rare diseases. He served as the Chief Medical Officer (CMO), National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD), Washington, DC, after leaving the US FDA. He has held several other illustrious positions with increasing responsibilities during his career, including CDC Country Director for Rwanda, Senior Research Investigator in the Viral Epidemiology Branch of the National Cancer Institute, and Branch Chief, Therapeutics and Blood Safety, CBER, FDA. He is currently Professor of Regulatory Practice at the Keck Graduate Center, Claremont, CA, in addition to his role as the Principal at COC.