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Aphios Corporation Awarded National Institutes of Health SBIR Grant to Develop Novel Anti-Smallpox Therapeutics

September 09, 2003Aphios Corporation has been awarded a Phase I Small Business Innovative Research (SBIR) grant for the “Development of Novel Anti-Smallpox Therapeutics from Marine Microorganisms,” from the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM), National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Smallpox infection is characterized by a high fever and rash; the mortality rate is very high, approximately 30%. Person to person infection usually occurs by the transfer of aerosols or fluid droplets. The vast vaccination effort between 1967 and 1972 led to the worldwide eradication of Smallpox in 1977. Currently, viral stocks of Smallpox are restricted to the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, Georgia and the State Research Center of Virology and Biotechnology in Novosibirsk, Russia; reputedly, Smallpox may be available on the black market to anyone with the correct price. The terrorist events of September 11th, 2001 and subsequent criminal anthrax exposures have increased the awareness of Smallpox’s use as a biological weapon, and steps are being taken to prepare for the possibility of an attack. Smallpox is considered a “Category A priority pathogen” by the NIH and Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

While the US has sufficient vaccines onhand to vaccinate the entire population, there are concerns about the logistical implementation of such a plan and the timing between expsoure and efficacy. There are also concerns regarding potential adverse side-effects for the elderly, sick and immuno-compromised patients. Additionally, there have even been significant concerns about the risks versus benefits of preemptive vaccination of healthcare workers. Dr. Trevor Castor, CEO of Aphios Corporation, states that “Some of these concerns can be addessed by developing safe and effective anti-Smallpox therapeutics that can be stockpiled.” Aphios plans to discover and develop novel anti-Smallpox therapeutics through the screening of its unique library of marine molecules against Vaccinia variola, a less virulent surrogate pox virus, in its Biohazard Safety Level 3 (BSL-3) facility.

In its adjacent Biohazard Safety Level 2 (BSL-2) laboratory, in collaboration with leading research and oceanographic institutions, Aphios has established a library of unique marine microorganisms from diverse environments, including deep-sea sediments to shallow water mangrove swamps, tropical waters to temperate oceans, hydrothermal vents as well as normal saline conditions to hypersaline ponds. The microbes are fermented in different media designed to maximize the diversity of secondary metabolites being generated. The biodiversity of Aphios’ marine microorganism library is further enhanced by selectively extracting secondary metabolites with proprietary and patented supercritical fluid microbial cell disruption and fractionation technologies.

Aphios (www.aphios.com) is a biopharmaceutical company that is developing enhanced natural therapeutics for health maintenance and the treatment of human diseases with a focus on infectious diseases, cancer and quality-of-life medicines. Aphios’ product pipeline includes therapeutics from medicinal plants and marine organisms, and improved drug delivery formulations of small anticancer molecules as well as large protein macromolecules and enzymes that are crucial for sustaining life and good health.

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