The Jerusalem Post

FDA clears Pluristem radiation treatment for emergency use

- • By TOVA COHEN

Pluristem Therapeuti­cs Inc, a Haifa-based developer of placenta-based stem cell products, said the US Food and Drug Administra­tion has cleared the emergency use of its therapy to treat acute radiation exposure in a nuclear event.

Pluristem said it will start preparatio­ns to keep an emergency stock of PLX-R18 on hand for use in such events.

Full approval of the drug will depend on the results of a Phase III clinical trial. Pluristem said on Monday it is in discussion­s with the FDA and several US agencies to clear the path for such a large finalstage study.

The US National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases sponsored and completed a mid-stage study of PLXR18 in the treatment of acute radiation syndrome (ARS) in animals via the FDA’s “animal rule pathway” as ARS cannot be tested in humans. PLX-R18 will be provided up to 96 hours following radiation exposure.

It is also being studied by the US Department of Defense to support the armed forces as a treatment prior to, or within the first 24 hours of radiation exposure.

“We are increasing the survival rate following high-level radiation exposure,” Arik Eisenkraft, Pluristem’s director of homeland defense projects, told Reuters. “We see improvemen­t in all three blood lineages - red cells, white cells and platelets.”

PLX-R18 is injected into the muscle twice, a week apart.

It is designed to treat bone marrow that is unable to produce enough blood cells due to a variety of causes, including ARS and certain cancers or cancer treatments.

“We think that the everyday use of the compound will be for bone marrow failure of any cause,” Eisenkraft said.

Pluristem said its cells can be administer­ed to patients without the need for tissue matching. One placenta makes 20,000 treatments.

Pluristem is conducting advanced Phase III trials in the United States and Europe of another product, PLX-PAD, to treat patients with the endstage of peripheral artery disease, to prevent the need for amputation. (Reuters)

 ?? (Baz Ratner/Reuters) ?? A LAB WORKER removes cells from a storage unit at Pluristem Theraputic­s in Haifa in 2016.
(Baz Ratner/Reuters) A LAB WORKER removes cells from a storage unit at Pluristem Theraputic­s in Haifa in 2016.

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