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Office of News and Information
Johns Hopkins University
3003 N. Charles Street, Suite 100
Baltimore, Maryland 21218-3843
Phone: (410) 516-7160 | Fax (410) 516-5251

June 26, 2000
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Michael C. Purdy
mcp@jhu.edu


Hopkins Professor's Work is Focus of Unique Start-Up

A Singaporean businessman plans to make a multi-million dollar investment in a groundbreaking new start-up company that will further develop basic cancer treatment research conducted at The Johns Hopkins University.

During a visit to Johns Hopkins on June 27, Ang Tiong Loi will sign a letter of intent to invest in a new company dedicated to developing a group of naturally occurring compounds isolated from creosote bushes that have shown some early signs of promise as cancer treatments.

Ru Chih Huang, a biology professor in the Johns Hopkins School of Arts and Sciences and John Gnabre, a postdoctoral fellow, first identified the compounds as potential anti-viral medications. Huang, Jonathan Heller, a graduate student of Huang, and other members of Huang's laboratory have since found evidence, currently in preparation for publication, that the compounds might be useful as cancer treatments.

"One of the first objectives of the new company will be to design and conduct FDA- approved clinical trials of these substances," said Nina Siegler, Director of the Office of Technology Transfer at Hopkins.

Ang, whose primary business is real estate, is a native of Singapore who will travel to Hopkins with his family. Ang knows of Huang both through family connections and through Huang's reputation in Asia. Earlier this year, The World Journal, a worldwide Chinese-language newspaper, named Huang one of the "100 Most Notable Chinese North Americans of the Century."

"Mr. Ang is supporting this because he believes in the program and in Dr. Huang," George Lee, an American representative of Ang, said. "He's impressed by Dr. Huang and her dedication."

Lee stressed that although the new company is a business, an atypical, almost philanthropic spirit is envisioned for its endeavors.

Lee and Siegler say the intent of the new company is to keep the price of the drug as low as possible. "Since this is a modification of a natural product, we think it could be manufactured fairly inexpensively," Siegler explained. "That still has to be confirmed, as does the product's potential as a cancer treatment, but we're hopeful that if this works out we might be able to price any resulting drugs in a way that makes them available to all the people of the world and still makes returns for the university and the investor."

A number of contractual arrangements have yet to be made, according to Siegler, but when they are completed, Lee will supervise the founding of the company.

"Most of the money will go into clinical trials, not into corporate overhead," Siegler notes. "It wouldn't be fair to call it a virtual company, but much of what goes on will be dedicated to seeing if this compound can work in a variety of human cancers."

As an example, Siegler cited tentative plans to hire a contract research organization to help implement clinical trials that can meet with FDA approval.

Ted Poehler, vice provost for research at Hopkins, said arrangements for the new start- up have come together with unusual speed.

"There are a number of parties, including Mr. Ang, who are very impressed with the work Dr. Huang and her team have done so far, and how far they've been able to take it," Poehler concludes.

Related Web Sites

Huang lab web page  


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