MANH SCI USD.001 : Manhattan Scientifics & Senior Scientific Cancer Project Enters Clinical Trial
03/21/2011 | 08:25am
Manhattan Scientifics, Inc. (OTCBB: MHTX) said today that ?The Gray
Sheet" has written about an initial clinical trial that has enrolled its
first 35 patients to measure leukemia cells using a unique
nanotechnology-based magnetic imaging method developed by Senior
Scientific LLC, which has licensed the technology to Manhattan
Scientifics, Inc.
An authorized copy of the article authored by Zach Miners follows:
Nanotechnology Cancer Detection Technology Moves To Clinical Trial
A first-in-man clinical trial to measure very small levels of residual
leukemia cells using a unique nanotechnology-based magnetic imaging
method has enrolled its first 35 patients.
The technology, in development by Senior Scientific and
nanomedicine-focused investment firm Manhattan Scientifics, is still
years from reaching the market, but the firms say they are in active
partnering discussions with several large drug, device and imaging
companies.
The trial, which will enroll 60 patients in all, is expected to be
completed within two years. In leukemia, the focus is on monitoring the
effect of chemotherapy by detecting residual disease. The technique also
has applications in gauging therapy response in a range of other
cancers, according to the developers.
?If you're doing chemotherapy, hyperthermia or even surgery, we can use
our device to see that you get it all,? said Edward Flynn, founder and
president of Senior Scientific. ?The leukemia case is just one example.?
The companies are also assessing the tool for early detection of breast
cancer, other malignancies and Alzheimer's disease, he said.
Magnetically Measuring Cancer Cells
The technique being studied in the leukemia trial involves first
extracting bone marrow cells from leukemia patients; injecting the cell
sample with magnetic nanoparticles linked to antigens that
preferentially bind to leukemia cells rather than normal cells; and
measuring the concentration of leukemia cells in the sample by employing
a patented magnetic biopsy needle and a specialized sensor array for
magnetic fields.
Flynn says the technology can detect "minimal residual disease" down to
0.3% of a sample. Achieving that level of sensitivity is the primary
endpoint of the study, which is being conducted at the University of New
Mexico's Health Sciences Center. Comparatively, current biopsy
techniques typically fail to detect leukemia cells that account for less
than 5% of a sample, he notes.
Detecting the presence of minimal residual disease provides information
on how well chemotherapy is working, and when it might be appropriate to
stop treatment or change doses or drugs. More refined monitoring of
chemotherapy is particularly important in pediatric leukemia, Flynn
says, because the treatments can have significant short- and long-term
adverse effects on the young patients.
Flynn also specifically pressed the promise of the technology for early
detection of breast cancer, noting that magnetic nanoparticle- based
detection can localize a breast tumor containing 100,000 cells – or
1/1000th of what a mammogram requires.
The magnetic-based detection also limits the potential for false
positives and is not affected by the presence of scar tissue from
surgeries and implants, he points out.
In Vivo Approach Is Next Step
Ultimately, Flynn says the goal is to perform the technique by an in
vivo approach, where the antigen-linked nanoparticles are injected into
the body, providing a means to detect the precise location of cancer
cells.
This presents a potential strategy for monitoring tumor evolution. As
the tumor grows or shrinks, for instance, the number of nanoparticles
bound to the cancer cells also grows or shrinks and could be promptly
measured, Flynn suggests.
It also could allow for more targeted chemotherapy, limiting adverse
effects of widespread treatment.
?It's a smart-bombing approach,? explains Marvin Maslow, founder and
chairman emeritus at Manhattan Scientifics.
In February 2010, Manhattan acquired rights to all commercial
applications of the technology, which was developed by Flynn.
Flynn, a nuclear physicist by training, founded privately held Senior
Scientific in 1996 to develop magnetic-based cancer cell detection. The
firm has received $7 million in research grants from the National
Institutes of Health since 2002, mostly through the Small Business
Innovation Research program.
About Manhattan Scientifics
Manhattan Scientifics Inc. (www.mhtx.com)
operates with locations in New Mexico, New York, and Montreal. The
company's goal is to advance and commercialize disruptive technologies
to create profit for its shareholders in the field of nano-medicine.
Forward-looking statement
This press release contains forward-looking statements, which are
subject to a number of risks, assumptions and uncertainties that could
cause the Company's actual results to differ materially from those
projected in such forward-looking statements. Management at Manhattan
Scientifics believes that purchase of its shares should be considered to
be at the high end of the risk spectrum. Forward-looking statements
speak only as of the date made and are not guarantees of future
performance. We undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any
forward-looking statements.

Manhattan Scientifics, Inc.
PR:
Stanton Public
Relations & Marketing
Michael Kassin, 212-366-5300
MKassin@StantonPRM.com
or
Manhattan
Scientifics:
Marvin Maslow 917-923-3300
marvin@mhtx.com
or
Senior Scientific:
Edward
R. Flynn, Ph.D
erf@seniorscientific.com
or
U.S.
& Canadian Investor Relations:
Hawk Associates
Frank
Hawkins, 305-451-1888
or
European Contact:
Herbert
Strauss, +43-316-296-316
email: herbert"at"eu-ir.com
© Business Wire 2011