Posted on February 11th, 2010 by Health News
YM BioSciences Inc., is presenting posters on its JAK1/2 inhibiting small molecule (CYT387) and on its novel vascular disrupting agent (CYT997) at the Lorne Cancer Conference in Lorne, Victoria, Australia. CYT387 is an oral JAK1/2 inhibitor, originating from the seminal discovery of JAK1 and JAK2 kinases by Dr. Andrew Wilks, the founder of Cytopia Limited, now YM Australia. CYT997 is an orally-available agent with dual mechanisms of vascular disruption and cytotoxicity and has the potential to be broadly active against a range of tumor types.
Read more
Filed under: Pharmacy News
Tags: cancer, Pharmacy, Tumor
Related posts
- ZIOPHARM receives European patent allowance for palifosfamide to treat cancer (0)
ZIOPHARM Oncology, Inc. announced today that it has received an allowance from the European Patent Office for Patent Application No. 05 821 125.1, entitled "Salts of Isophosphoramide mustard and analogs thereof as anti-tumor agents" with claims directed to pharmaceutical compositions of a novel DNA cross-linker, including palifosfamide and their use in treating cancer.
Read more
[tags] Pharmacy [...]
- ZIOPHARM announces new preclinical data from two darinaparsin studies on solid tumors (0)
ZIOPHARM Oncology, Inc., a drug development company employing small molecule and synthetic biology approaches to cancer therapy, announced today new preclinical data from two separate studies of darinaparsin, a novel organic arsenic, in various solid tumor models at the AACR-NCI-EORTC International Conference on Molecular Targets and Cancer Therapeutics, taking place November 12-16 in San Francisco.
Read [...]
- Why prostate cancer patients fail hormone deprivation therapy (0)
The hormone deprivation therapy that prostate cancer patients often take gives them only a temporary fix, with tumors usually regaining their hold within a couple of years.
Read more
[tags] Pharmacy News [/tags]
- What Protein And Where It Is Located Are Important For Drug Design (0)
Drugs that target a single signaling pathway that drives tumor development and/or progression have been developed successfully to treat a few forms of cancer. However, in many cases drugs designed using this approach have not worked. Dario Altieri and colleagues, at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, have now addressed this issue by using [...]
- What Is Herceptin (trastuzumab)? What Is Herceptin For? (0)
Herceptin is the brand name of a medicine called trastuzumab. This medicine can stop the growth of breast cancer and sometimes reduce the size of the tumor. Herceptin is given by a drip into a vein. It can be given in combination with chemotherapy, or on its own to patients who have already had [...]
Leave a Reply