Fake blood passes early tests
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Alicia Robinson
If all goes as Robert Nicora expects, doctors in surgery might
someday be calling for “more Oxycyte, stat!”
Nicora is president of Costa Mesa-based Synthetic Blood
International Inc. The company announced Tuesday that early testing
of Oxycyte, a blood substitute, in human subjects is showing success.
Oxycyte is synthetic blood made of liquid perfluorocarbon --
Teflon is a fluorocarbon solid -- emulsified in water and salt. Its
intended use is to temporarily replace blood in surgery and trauma
patients, Nicora said.
The first of three phases of clinical testing began after the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration granted approval for the testing in
April. Volunteer subjects were given low doses of the synthetic blood
and then monitored.
“We saw no side effects of any kind there,” Nicora said.
Tests with a higher dosage of the product began Wednesday, and the
third and highest dosage will be administered to subjects in a few
weeks, Nicora said. He expects initial testing to be finished by the
end of the year and a report of the results will be submitted to the
government in January.
“We have a pretty good idea what to expect already based on the
animal studies we’ve done,” he said.
Oxycyte replaces the liquid volume of lost blood and transports
oxygen to the body’s tissues and takes carbon dioxide to the lungs,
Nicora said.
“That’s all you really need blood to do on a short-term basis
during surgery,” he said. A blood substitute isn’t effective in the
long term because it lacks red blood cells and it only stays in the
body a few days.
But in some situations synthetic blood has advantages over the
real thing: It carries no risk of disease transmission, it can be
used in patients regardless of their blood type and its shelf life is
up to two years, compared with the 40-day life span of human blood,
Nicora said.
Because it doesn’t need to be refrigerated, it can be used easily
by medics in the field. Nicora also envisions Oxycyte being used
therapeutically for people who need more oxygen in their bodies, such
as heart attack and stroke victims or chemotherapy and radiation
patients.
While those promises are seductive, not everyone is as confident
that Oxycyte will end up on the market.
Other companies have explored synthetic blood, but the research
has always petered out during clinical trials.
“The fact of the matter is that there have been lots of touted
blood substitutes for many, many years, but none of them have been
licensed by the FDA,” said Dr. Ross Herron, medical director of the
American Red Cross Southern California Blood Services Region.
Synthetic blood would help some patients, but not people who need
chronic transfusions and require the benefits of red blood cells,
Herron said.
While an approved blood substitute would benefit the medical
community, Herron said, “I just don’t know if it’s ever going to
happen, because red blood cells and their function are very hard to
replace.”
Nicora acknowledged that other companies have failed at developing
blood substitutes. San Diego-based Alliance Pharmaceutical made it to
late-phase testing before its research was terminated, he said.
The FDA bases its approval of products on that late, “phase III”
research.
With all that is known from other companies’ trials and Synthetic
Blood International’s own tests to date, Nicora said, “we’re very
confident that we’re going to be able to start important clinical
testing in patients early next year.”
He’s already had interest from pharmaceutical giants such as
Baxter Pharmaceuticals and Johnson & Johnson, he said.
And if Oxycyte shows positive results early in the next phase of
tests, Nicora expects company stock to rise well above $1 a share.
“We’re penny stock now,” he said.
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