One in three adults aged 60 and over suffering from a hip fracture
dies within one year. Now, a Purdue University-affiliated startup is
moving closer to the start of clinical trials for a novel injectable
drug that is targeted to heal broken bones faster and strengthen weak
bones.
The Purdue University discovered drug, NOV004, from Novosteo Inc. is
unique in that it concentrates at the fracture site while reducing
exposure to the rest of the body.
Novosteo, the startup developing the drug, was co-founded by
father-son team Philip S. Low, the Presidential Scholar for Drug
Discovery and the Ralph C. Corley Distinguished Professor of Chemistry,
and Stewart A. Low, the company’s CSO and Visiting Scholar in Purdue’s
Department of Chemistry. The treatment was developed in the Purdue
laboratory of Low in the Purdue Institute of Drug Discovery. Currently
there are 288 clinical trials performed or in process using
Purdue-developed medical treatments at 4,841 sites across the globe.
Scott Salka, who recently joined the startup as executive chair, will
use his 28 years of experience as a biotechnology entrepreneur to help
Novosteo move its innovations from the laboratory to clinical trials and
ultimately in to the hands of doctors and patients.
“We have been working on some amazing science with people truly
dedicated to making a difference in reducing the mortality and improving
the quality of life for our aging population,” said Salka. “We have
completed preclinical studies with NOV004 and are looking to take it to
clinical trials later this year.”
As CEO, Salka has successfully led efforts to advance novel drugs
through preclinical and early clinical development, most recently at
publicly traded Ampliphi, now Armata NYSE: ARMP. Prior to that he
founded and served as CEO for both Ambit Biosciences, acquired by
Daiichi Sankyo OTC: DSNKY, and Rakuten Medical.
Novosteo is already looking at the future use of the
injectable-targeted drug for other applications, including dental
implants, head and facial fractures, and hip and knee replacements. In
addition, Novosteo has a pipeline of drugs for treating an array of
musculoskeletal maladies. Salka will present some of the technology at
Biocom’s Global Life Science Partnering Conference this month in La
Jolla, California.
Novosteo’s technology is licensed through the Purdue Research
Foundation Office of Technology Commercialization. The company also
received entrepreneurial support from Purdue Foundry, an
entrepreneurship and commercialization hub in Discovery Park District’s
Convergence Center for Innovation and Collaboration where startups,
entrepreneurs, innovators and companies can collaborate with Purdue to
address global challenges in health, sustainability, IT and space.
The Purdue Institute of Drug Discovery is situated near the district,
a $1 billion-plus long-term enterprise to support a transformational
center of innovation on the western edge of the Purdue University
campus. The district already includes a public airport with a 7,000-foot
runway, and partnerships international companies including Rolls-Royce,
Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories and Saab. Visit Discovery Park
District.
Novosteo was founded to reduce the morbidity, mortality and loss of
productivity associated with bone fractures. Based on discoveries of
agents that accelerate bone regeneration and breakthroughs in methods to
target these agents selectively to fracture surfaces, Novosteo has
designed a series of fracture-targeted drugs that concentrate a drug’s
healing power specifically at the fracture site, thereby greatly
accelerating and improving the healing process. The mission of Novosteo
is to reduce the debilitating and often life-threatening effects of bone
fractures. More information is available on the Novosteo website.
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-02/pu-idf021120.php
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