
11 14 07 | HAYWARD,
CA and ST. LOUIS
Singulex Collaborates
with Washington University School of Medicine
to Advance Biomarker Research in Human Disease
Company also receives National Cancer Institute
Small Business Innovation Research contract in partnership with Sigma
Aldrich and Washington University
Singulex, Inc. today announced a collaboration
with researchers at Washington University School of Medicine to increase
the clinical utility of both validated and recently discovered biomarkers
in human disease. Singulex also announced the company will receive
a $900,000 Phase I/II Fast
Track Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR)
contract from the National Cancer Institute (NCI)
to create biomarker assays to help predict patient response and therapeutic
efficacy of cancer therapies in development.
Scientists at Washington University School of Medicine
will be part of Singulex’s Erenna™ Technology Access
Program (ETAP) to develop biomarker assays for both validated and
putative biomarkers in important disease areas, including breast
cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, and stroke. ETAP allows
early access for institutions and companies to Erenna, the company’s
flagship biomarker detection platform system which incorporates Singulex’s
proprietary advanced biomarker detection technologies and optimized
immunoassays. An Erenna system has been installed in the proteomics
core facility, run by R. Reid Townsend, M.D., Ph.D., at Washington
University’s Siteman Cancer Center.
"We are pleased to collaborate with Singulex
to evaluate this innovative technology that was developed here in
St. Louis," said Samuel Stanley, M.D., vice chancellor of research
at Washington University. "Together with Singulex, we want to
determine whether the Erenna system can assess the effectiveness
of novel anti-cancer drugs early in their development and predict
patients' responses to these therapies."
Among the earliest investors in Singulex was Prolog
Ventures of St. Louis. “We now consider Singulex to be one
of the most exciting companies in our portfolio,” said Prolog
Ventures managing director and Singulex director, Greg Johnson. “We
are especially pleased to see that the first Erenna placement at
a major medical research center occurred at Washington University.”
For the NCI SBIR contract, Singulex will collaborate
with researchers at Washington University and St. Louis-based Sigma
Aldrich. Singulex will use biological samples from Washington University
and optimized reagents from Sigma Aldrich to develop assays to detect
important expression level changes for a panel of proteins associated
with the growth of many cancers. The goal of these assays is to measure
the efficacy of potential anticancer drugs earlier in the developmental
process and provide insight to patients’ response to new candidate
therapeutic agents. For example, an assay for changes in vascular
endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in blood, a protein biomarker correlated
to a poor prognosis for breast cancer patients, could potentially
determine if a clinical-stage drug candidate is active against VEGF and whether treatment with the candidate correlates to tumor regression.
“Biomarkers indicative of disease states
are increasingly crucial to translating basic science breakthroughs
into better patient outcomes,” said Philippe Goix, Ph.D., president
and CEO of Singulex. “However, until now, technologies that
reliably measure small variations in biomarker expression levels
in serum samples have been lacking. The Erenna system gives researchers
the ability to measure small changes of biomarkers from healthy to
disease states to provide answers not only about disease progression
but also therapeutic efficacy of drugs in development.”
This project has been funded in whole or in part
with Federal funds from the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes
of Health, and Department of Health and Human Services, under Contract
Number HHSN261200700047C.
About Singulex
Singulex develops and commercializes innovative
technology solutions that enable disease understanding and management
for life science researchers and clinicians. Utilizing proprietary
quantitative single-molecule detection technology, Singulex develops
customized biomarker diagnostic systems that can detect and quantify
normal and abnormal protein biomarkers in a variety of biological
samples with extreme sensitivity and accuracy. Singulex is currently
conducting several pilot studies with academic and molecular diagnostic
partners to validate the company's commercial digital molecule detection
platform, the Erenna™ Immunoassay System. Singulex’s
research and development facilities are located at the Center for
Emerging Technologies in St. Louis, Missouri, and the company’s
commercial operations are based in Hayward, California.
To learn more about Singulex, please visitwww.singulex.com.
About NCI
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) is a component
of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), one of eight agencies
that compose the Public Health Service (PHS) in the Department of
Health and Human Services (DHHS). NCI coordinates the National Cancer
Program, which conducts and supports research, training, health information
dissemination, and other programs with respect to the cause, diagnosis,
prevention, and treatment of cancer, rehabilitation from cancer,
and the continuing care of cancer patients and the families of cancer
patients.
To learn more about NCI, please visitwww.cancer.gov.
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