CEL-SCI Corporation Releases Letter to Shareholders
06 10월 2009 - 3:30AM
PR Newswire (US)
VIENNA, Va., Oct. 5 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The following letter
is being released by CEL-SCI Corporation (NYSE AMEX: CVM) to its
shareholders: Dear Fellow Shareholders: After FDA had communicated
several weeks ago that we could proceed with our initial clinical
trial with our proposed H1N1 treatment for hospitalized H1N1
patients, we have received many questions with regards to H1N1.
With this in mind, we have asked one of our outside collaborators,
Ken S. Rosenthal, Ph.D., Professor, Microbiology, Immunology and
Biochemistry, Northeastern Ohio Universities Colleges of Medicine
and Pharmacology, to help explain in layman's terms the course of
the H1N1 disease and why it can be so dangerous. Dr. Rosenthal also
has provided an explanation of how CEL-SCI's investigational H1N1
treatment may help in very sick hospitalized patients. Dr.
Rosenthal explains: Background information on influenza and H1N1
influenza: Influenza infection could have very mild consequences or
cause very severe disease. At the least, it may seem like a severe
cold and at the worst, it can be life-threatening. Influenza is a
respiratory virus spread in the tiny water droplets that we release
every time we exhale and then are inhaled by another person. These
droplets enter the mouth and nose and travel down the throat and
into the lungs. When influenza infects a person's lungs, there are
three destructive components working together to cause disease: the
virus's ability to kill the lung cells; the immune system's
inflammatory reactions that kill influenza infected cells; and
bacterial infections that establish themselves in the diseased
environment. Influenza virus infects the ciliated epithelial cells
of the respiratory tract that help keep foreign material out of the
lungs. The virus attaches to these cells through specific sugar
molecules, called sialic acids, on the proteins and lipids on the
surface of the cell. Different influenza viruses bind to variations
of these sialic acids. These sialic acids can be different in
different parts of the lung and so some influenza viruses infect
the upper respiratory tract, like H1N1, whereas others, like avian
flu H5N1, infect cells in the lower lung. Avian flu also likes the
warmer environment that is deeper in the lung. While avian flu has
high mortality, it is not easily transmitted because it requires
special receptors present on a cell to enter the cell and those
receptors are only present in cells deep down in the lungs.
Therefore large amounts of virus are required to infect a patient
with avian flu H5N1. Swine flu, H1N1, on the other hand, is easily
transmitted because it prefers other receptors to enter a cell and
infects the upper respiratory tract. After infection, the infected
cell becomes a factory to make more viruses. Ultimately, when the
virus reproduces in the cell, the cell will die. Before the cell
dies, it sends out a molecular warning to other cells, a cytokine
protein called interferon. Interferon is an early warning system
that puts other cells on the alert to go on strike and not become a
virus factory and also warns the body to activate immune
protections. The immune protections cause the flu like symptoms
that go with influenza disease. As the infection progresses and
spreads, white blood cells called dendritic cells that are in the
lung detect the virus, become stimulated and release other
cytokines to activate the body's defenses. These cytokines include
tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin 1 and interleukin 6. These
cytokines promote inflammation. Influenza is a very good inducer of
these cytokines. The dendritic cells also activate another white
blood cell called a T lymphocyte, or T cell. The T cell makes even
more cytokines that activate protections, including the production
of antibodies by another type of lymphocyte, called a B cell, as
well as killer T cells that travel to the infection to kill the
influenza infected cells. Although the T cells and antibody are
very important to control and eliminate the virus infection, it
takes a long time (up to about 8 days) before they are ready to do
so. By this time, the virus has spread extensively and caused
considerable damage. Even though these immune protections are
important for controlling the spread of the virus, they are also
very destructive. Like an ever expanding forest-fire or a growing
war zone, the longer the virus has to reproduce and spread, the
harder it is to control, the more damage it causes and the more
damage the immune response causes to control the infection,
peripheral damage to the lung and surrounding tissue. The virus
damaged tissue in the respiratory tract is now also more
susceptible to the bacteria that normally reside in the nose,
including Staphylococcus aureus. The virus kills the ciliated
epithelium that pushes these bacteria out of the lungs and
dissolves the mucous lining that protects the underlying cells. The
infection also exposes cells that are more susceptible to the
bacteria. As a result, many people who are infected with influenza
end up with a bacterial pneumonia that can be life threatening. The
new H1N1 swine flu virus is a much more lethal virus than previous
influenza viruses, including previous H1N1 influenzas. Unlike other
influenzas, the new H1N1 virus is especially lethal in young
adults. It appears that H1N1 may be able to bind to more cells in
the lung, reproduce faster, and spread faster. The more cells that
are infected, the more difficult it is for the immune system to
eliminate the virus and the more damage the immune system causes by
inflammation during the process. Also, H1N1 may cause even more
cytokines to be produced which also make the inflammation much more
severe. This is called a cytokine storm. Young adults, as they have
a very strong immune system, have a very potent inflammatory
response, seemingly more active than in young children or older
adults. Although it seems illogical, their overactive inflammatory
response may put these individuals at higher risk to serious
disease due to the damage it causes in trying to eliminate the
virus infection. Influenza vaccines activate immune responses in
people that can last for a long time. For a vaccinated individual
the vaccine induced immune response can act quickly to stop the
reproduction of the virus, limit the spread of the virus and
quickly prevent significant virus damage. Currently there are two
types of influenza vaccines, a live vaccine and a killed vaccine. A
person receiving the Flumist live vaccine is infected with a
weakened mixture of influenza viruses that cannot cause serious
disease but they activate the immune response to produce T cells
that make cytokines to activate T cells and other white blood cells
that will kill influenza infected cells and stimulate antibody
production. Other influenza vaccines use inactivated virus or the
H1 and N1 proteins of the virus to immunize a person and produce
only antibodies against the virus. These vaccines take
approximately 10 days to produce a protective immune response.
CEL-SCI's DENDRITIC H1N1 TREATMENT CEL-SCI's dendritic H1N1
treatment, being developed as a treatment for H1N1 hospitalized
patients, utilizes the unique LEAPS vaccine technology to convert
an individual's white blood cells into cells targeted to killing
influenza. The treatment is based on CEL-SCI's L.E.A.P.S.
technology. LEAPS vaccines are small proteins that combine a piece
of an influenza protein with a small activator protein. The
combined protein activates the dendritic cell, a white blood -
cell, which presents the influenza protein to the T cell and then
tells that T cell with a focused, controlled amount of cytokine, to
grow and make the cytokines necessary to activate protective T cell
immune responses including killer T cells. This unique action
promotes the production of inducer cytokines without the tissue
damage and flu-symptom promoting cytokines (pro-inflammatory
cytokines), tumor necrosis factor alpha or interleukin 1. This
helps prevent or get around the issue of cytokine storm in which
the production of too many pro-inflammatory cytokines contributes
to the clinical decline and death of the patient. The activated
dendritic cells seek out T cells that are specific for H1N1
influenza, present the influenza protein to them with the
appropriate cytokines to get them excited, increase their numbers
so that they can attack the infected cells with minimal peripheral
damage. The dendritic H1N1 treatment customizes the anti- influenza
power of the LEAPS influenza technology. In short, the dendritic
H1N1 treatment causes the maturation of monocyte white blood cells
into dendritic cells that can direct and activate the subsequent
immune response against H1N1 infected cells with minimal peripheral
damage. End of Dr. Rosenthal's explanation. We are currently moving
forward as fast as is possible with our proposed dendritic H1N1
treatment for hospitalized H1N1 patients, while proceeding with due
caution and taking all necessary steps to meet regulatory
requirements. The virus was only discovered 6 months ago and
already we are embarking upon our initial clinical trial. With
regard to our investigational cancer medicine Multikine, we are
preparing to commence the global Phase III clinical trial designed
to support marketing approval. The validation of our new
manufacturing facility for contract manufacturing operations is
nearing completion, and we have expanded that validation to cover
the manufacturing of Multikine in the new manufacturing facility as
well. From my perspective, we are in the best condition ever. We
finally have the financial resources to move forward on our
programs. Our manufacturing facility is coming online, the global
Phase III cancer trial for Multikine is being launched together
with Teva Pharmaceuticals and Orient EuroPharma as two of our main
partners, and we are racing to develop what we hope to be the first
effective treatment for hospitalized H1N1 patients. We will
continue to keep you up-to-date with any further material
developments. We thank you for your support as we move forward in
several key areas. Sincerely, Geert Kersten Chief Executive Officer
For more information, please visit http://www.cel-sci.com/. When
used in this report, the words "intends," "believes," "anticipated"
and "expects" and similar expressions are intended to identify
forward-looking statements. Such statements are subject to risks
and uncertainties which could cause actual results to differ
materially from those projected. Factors that could cause or
contribute to such differences include, lack of regulatory
clearance to proceed with clinical trials, an inability to
duplicate the clinical results demonstrated in clinical studies
that have been completed or that are initiated in the future,
timely development of any potential products that can be shown to
be safe and effective, unwillingness of regulatory authorities to
engage in further regulatory dialogue, receiving necessary
regulatory approvals, difficulties in manufacturing any of the
Company's potential products, inability to raise the necessary
capital, and the risk factors set forth from time to time in
CEL-SCI Corporation's SEC filings, including but not limited to its
report on Form 10- K/A for the year ended September 30, 2008. The
Company undertakes no obligation to publicly release the result of
any revision to these forward-looking statements which may be made
to reflect the events or circumstances after the date hereof or to
reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events. DATASOURCE: CEL-SCI
Corporation CONTACT: Gavin de Windt of CEL-SCI Corporation,
+1-703-506-9460 Web Site: http://www.cel-sci.com/
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