Polonium poisoning creates a market need for treatment

Published 5 February 2007

Few treatments exists for curing alpha particle damage; Litvinenko’s death sends companies scrambling; Ovation Pharmaceuticals, Biolabs Protectan, and Hollis-Eden Pharmaceuticals all make claims

The days when a spy could sit down relaxedly with a Russian colleague

for a shaken martini are over. What with the Russian secret services

running a ring of experimental poisoners from London to Kiev, CIA

officers have every reason to fear more than just a hangover in the

morning. Just ask Alexander Litvinenko, the former KGB officer whose

recent death from polonium poisoing — skillfully executed in a sushi

restaurant — has shined a bright light on an area of radiological

warfare heretofore rarely observed. It is no wonder that many see in

it a fruitful line of research — and, perhaps, business.

Whether a surgical assassination like that of Mr. Litvinenko or a

dirty bomb” attempt, the need to treat the victims is of the highest

order. A distinction needs to be made here: While a dirty bomb

releases massive amounts of gamma particles, for which there are

numerous, treatments, the ingestion of radioactive material results in

alpha particle damage, for which massive cell death and organ damage

is the norm. Currently, there are relatively fewer types of treatment

for alpha particles. However, with radioactive activity on the rise

more pharmaceutical companies are in the race.

Consider Deerfield, Illinois-based Ovation Pharmaceuticals, whose

product Chemet, is designed to bind with radioactive and heavy metal

isotopes and speed up their ejection from the body. The movement away

from organs and bone marrow increases survivability and chances for

recuperation. Cleveland, Ohio-based Biolabs Protectan takes a

different approach by preventing cells from self destructing thus

giving them more time to heal, while Neumune, a drug developed by San

Diego, Califoria-based Hollis-Eden Pharmaceuticals helps bone marrow

regenerate so as to boost cell production and the immune systems

response. (Unfortunately, it only works once the radioactive materials

have been ejected from the body.) Or, perhaps, a combination of all

three would be best. “There could be multiple cocktails that could

have a synergistic benefit,” said Ovation’s Jason Brandt.

-read more in Steve LeVine’s Wall Street Journal report [http://online.wsj.com/article/SB116969485323087208.html]