Just Announced on ASX !!
DÜSSELDORF, GERMANY (October 31st, 2011): ImmunAid Pty. Ltd. has been awarded a European
patent for its pioneering work in the treatment of cancer, based on monitoring the immune cycle of each
individual patient and then determining the optimal time to deliver treatment to that patient.
Dr. Svetomir Markovic, chair of the Melanoma Group at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, says, “The
discovery of the regulated immune response cycle in cancer patients is potentially of immense clinical
significance with profound public health implications.”
Approximately $32 billion is spent globally each year on cancer drugs, yet the cancer mortality rate
in the United States is more than 11,000 per week. An analysis of 63 clinical trials published since 2000
shows the average complete response rate--becoming cancer free--in late-stage patients across a wide
range of cancers is 7 percent.
ImmunAid Pty. Ltd. is a private Australian biotechnology company, majority owned by Genetic
Technologies Limited (ASX-GTG, NASDAQ-GENE). ImmunAid was founded a decade ago to explore the
concept developed by inventor Martin Ashdown that the immune system switches itself “on and off” in a
continuous, repeating cycle in patients with certain diseases, including auto-immune disease, and that
treatment should be timed to support the body’s own efforts to fight off such disease. Subsequently,
Ashdown expanded his concept to include cancer and several degenerative diseases.
Ashdown and the ImmunAid research team demonstrated that the immune system of cancer patients
undergoes a repeating cycle, and that the administration of treatment at certain critical moments within that
cycle can significantly improve the clinical outcome.
Dr. Mervyn Jacobson, ImmunAid chief executive officer, says. “Once we realized this immune cycle is
real and measurable, we postulated that the administration of chemotherapy and other anti-cancer therapies
should be timed to work with each individual patient’s immune system to attack the cancer. The results then
spoke for themselves.”
Professor Brendon Coventry, a senior surgical consultant and practicing surgeon at Royal Adelaide
Hospital, has conducted extensive clinical trials over several years in conjunction with ImmunAid. He says,
“Treatments ‘randomly’ given without consideration to a patient’s immune cycle explains why some patients
achieve a complete recovery and others do not.”
The Mayo Clinic currently is conducting an independently funded clinical trial to further assess the
influence of timed delivery of conventional chemotherapy for patients with cancer, and several hospitals and
universities in Australia are now conducting trials on cancer and also a number of other diseases, including
multiple sclerosis and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
Dr. Markovic states, “I have been struck by the scientific community’s acknowledgement of the
increasing validity of ImmunAid’s work. In Mayo’s ongoing experience, timed delivery of chemotherapy
appears to offer added therapeutic benefit in the treatment of metastatic melanoma.”
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