Statement re: Partial Investing of Share Options

Major Technical Innovation in Drug And Tumour Modelling Results in Partial Vesting of Share Options Oxford, UK 25th October 2005 Physiomics (AIM: PYC), a European systems biology simulation company, has developed a sophisticated addition to its core cell growth model showing why different cancer cells respond in different ways to an innovative new class of anti-cancer drugs. The simulation work also shows how some time-consuming laboratory work to grow cancer cells could now be modelled quickly in a computer rather than taking significantly longer in a laboratory. The utility of Physiomics' computer simulation approach was discussed1.2 at the International Conference on Systems Biology meeting in Boston, USA, 19th-21st October 2005. The technical innovation shows, using Physiomics' SystemCell® software, complex virtual cells 'growing' in the computer to mimic the experimental behaviour of many cancer cells and their responses to drugs. This important development paves the way for realistic and predictive models of tumours' drug responses. It also meets the criteria laid down by Physiomics' Remuneration Committee on key technical criteria such that 25% of the unapproved options granted on 26 June 2005 are now available for exercise. A better predictive system for testing cancer therapeutics is expected to be enormously valuable to pharmaceutical companies and could confer significant patient benefit through better treatment. Currently, only 5% of all cancer drugs that are tested in clinical trials are approved for patient use, half the industry norm 3. The new work on cell growth examines why small genetic differences between cancer cells mean that some die when treated whereas others survive and grow. This is not obvious from standard cell biology work, and it opens up the possibility of optimising treatment using appropriate drug combinations depending on patient profiles. The data used to develop this model is from the scientific literature and focuses specifically on an aurora kinase inhibitor drug candidate, VX-680, developed by Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc. and licensed to Merck & Co. Inc4. Published data on an aurora kinase inhibitor being developed by AstraZeneca has also been used. Aurora kinase inhibitors are a new type of therapeutic that has shown excellent cancer killing ability in preclinical studies. Some 16 aurora kinase inhibitors are under development by companies such as Astex Therapeutics Ltd, Chroma Therapeutics, Cyclacel Ltd, Millennium Pharmaceuticals Inc, Rigel Pharmaceuticals Inc and Serenex, in addition to Merck & Co and Vertex. Physiomics believes that computer simulations could help to optimise the transition from preclinical to clinical development and help in the optimisation of dose scheduling, one of the major problems in clinical trials. Studies5 have shown that improving the drug development success rate by 10% overall could save $242m per drug. Physiomics and Bayer Technology Services collaborate on Clinical Response Prediction in the area of cancer. 'For the pharmaceutical industry the virtual approach could represent huge savings in time and money by predicting the effective drug dose and schedule for different cell types. This currently is done step by step in the laboratory, or in inflexible clinical trials.' said Dr John Savin, CEO of Physiomics. 'Our technology is also very relevant for working out how best to use the new generation of targeted therapeutics and for reducing their clinical development risks.' --ENDS- 1) Cell Cycle Simulations for Examining the Effects of Drugs inhibiting Aurora Kinase According to Cancer Cell Phenotype, Chassagnole et al, Poster at ICSB 2005 2) Cell Cycle Lab: Using SystemCell® Technology for Multiple-Cell Simulations, Finney et al, Poster at ICSB 2005 3) Can the pharmaceutical industry reduce attrition rates? Kola, I. and Landis, J. Nature Reviews Drug Discovery, 3 (2004) 711-715 4) VX-680, a small molecule inhibitor of Aurora Kinases induces endoreplication and apoptosis preferentially in p53 and p21 deficient cells, Gizatullin, F,, et al, Poster LB-238 AACR Meeting 2004. 5) Tufts Center Impact Report 2002 For further information please contact: Physiomics plc Dr John Savin (CEO) Tel: + 44 1865 784 980 Mr David Evans (Chairman) Northbank Communications Tel: + 44 207 886 8150 Emma Palmer (financial enquiries) Fiona Brown/Rowan Minnion (media) Notes to Editors About aurora kinases Aurora kinases are key enzymes involved in the later stages of cell division, particularly the formation and control of the machinery that enables cells to divide. When applied to cancer cells, inhibitors of these enzymes prevent the cells from dividing properly. This can lead in some tumour types to cell growth being halted quickly. In other types of cancer cells, growth continues for more cycles before the cells start to die. Understanding the differences between these aspects has been problematic. A key part of Physiomics' work in this area has been reproducing two biomarkers of drug action. These are the extent of aurora kinase modification of a protein used to package DNA (histone H3), and a measure of the number of gene copies that a cell has (polyploidy). In addition, the model starts to explain why some cell types respond well to the drug and others do not. In the next stage of the development, different drug doses and schedules plus combinations with existing therapeutics could be explored. About treatment of virtual tumours Using the Physiomics advanced cell cycle model and SystemCell software, populations of virtual cells have been 'grown' in a computer and a virtual drug that targets aurora kinase administered. The virtual cell population quantitatively reproduced the observed experimental behaviour published in the literature (4). One type of responsive cell stopped growing after drug administration due to the action of the drug on the individual cells in the population model. Another cell type with a common cancer-causing alteration (reduction of p53 levels) kept on growing with two, four and eight times the normal amount of DNA. Cells with higher levels of DNA then started to experience cell death. In both cases, the virtual experiment reproduced results acquired over five days of actual experimental time in under an hour of computational time. This indicates that the model should have potential in predicting the effect of human drug doses, as well as the activity of new drugs and drug combinations. About Physiomics plc Physiomics plc (AIM:PYC) is a computational systems biology services company applying simulations of cell behaviour to drug development to reduce the high attrition rates of clinical trials. As 80-90 per cent of all clinical drug candidates fail to reach the market, estimates show that an overall ten per cent improvement in success rates could reduce the cost of one drug's development by as much as $242 million, from the current estimate of around $800 million. Physiomics is currently focused on optimising the design of cancer clinical trials as a service to major pharmaceutical companies. In addition, it has secured an option to in-license two innovative molecules in the cancer area from Cronos Therapeutics. Physiomics has a major collaboration with Bayer Technology Services GmbH to develop globally clinical response prediction services using both companies' proprietary technologies and mathematical cell models, including the SystemCell® technology developed by Physiomics. In June 2005, Physiomics became a distributor of Bayer's PK-Sim® product for understanding the way pharmaceuticals are distributed round the body. Physiomics, based in Oxford, UK, was founded in 2001, and floated on AIM in 2004. For further information, please visit www.physiomics-plc.com SystemCell is a registered trademark of Physiomics plc About Bayer Technology Servcies Bayer Technology Services GmbH is the center for technological competence of the Bayer Group worldwide. The Bayer company employs more than 2,100 experts worldwide at its headquarters in Leverkusen and other German locations, as well as in regional offices in Baytown (Texas, USA), Antwerp (Belgium), Mexico City (Mexico) and Shanghai (Peoples Republic of China). Bayer Technology Services posted sales of EUR 520 million in 2004, including utilities procurement for all Bayer sites in Germany (first six month only). In addition to fully-integrated solutions along the life cycle of pharmaceutical and chemical plants - from development through engineering and construction to process optimization, Bayer Technology Services offers a broad range of products and services for all stages of diagnostics and drug research and development. Examples include nano-phosphors, the pharmacokinetic simulation software PK-Sim ® as well as sophisticated data mining and modeling techniques. Additional information about Bayer Technology Services is available at www.bayertechnology.com Physiomics plc Registered in England and Wales Number 4225086 Registered Office: The Magdalen Centre, Oxford Science Park, Oxford OX4 4GA, UK

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