Statement re Patent

Oxford Biomedica PLC 26 June 2001 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 26 June 2001 For further information, please contact: Oxford BioMedica plc Professor Alan Kingsman, Chief Executive Tel: +44 (0) 1865 783 000 City/Financial Enquiries: Melanie Toyne Sewell / Fiona Noblet Financial Dynamics Tel: +44 (0) 207 831 3113 Scientific/Trade Press Enquiries: Chris Gardner, HCC*De Facto Group Tel: +44 (0) 207 496 3300 OXFORD BIOMEDICA OBTAINS FUNDAMENTAL PATENT FOR LENTIVIRAL GENE THERAPY TECHNOLOGY Oxford, UK - 26 June 2001: Oxford BioMedica plc announced today that it has received allowance from the US Patent Office for a fundamental patent covering its proprietary LentiVectora technology. The patent includes broad composition of matter claims and methods of production claims for lentiviral vector gene delivery systems of both human and non-human origin. The patent is particularly important because it covers derivatives of lentiviral vector systems that, unlike many versions of lentiviral vectors, have real clinical utility because of their safety. The BioMedica team was the first to construct lentiviral vectors that contain no viral genes at all, and which comprise the minimum number of viral components in the viral particles. It is this minimisation of the vectors that is the subject of the patent. This work was done using vectors based on HIV and Equine Infectious Anaemia Virus (EIAV), a horse virus that is not linked to any disease in humans. The EIAV system is BioMedica's system of choice because of its superior safety profile. Oxford BioMedica is currently utilising the EIAV-based vector system in target validation and gene discovery and in preclinical studies in therapies for prostate cancer and Parkinson's disease. In particular BioMedica has shown that LentiVectora has a unique capability for the delivery of genes at high efficiency to cells of the nervous system. This capability underlies BioMedica's candidate Parkinson's disease product ProSavin(R), and will be one of the main areas of focus for BioMedica Inc., Oxford BioMedica's new USA operation. 'Oxford BioMedica's LentiVectora technology is a powerful gene delivery platform that out-performs other vector systems in terms of its combination of high gene transfer efficiencies, duration and regulation of gene expression, ease of production and safety. This is reflected in the range of existing commercial interactions and further discussions that are underway related to this technology, and in encouraging results from a number of the Company's preclinical studies. We are working currently on taking our first LentiVector (R)-based products into clinical trials for cancer and for Parkinson's disease' said Alan Kingsman, Chief Executive of Oxford BioMedica. Notes to Editors 1. Oxford BioMedica plc Established in 1995, the Company specialises in the application of gene-based technology to the development of novel therapeutics. Its three principal activities are in the fields of gene therapy, immunotherapy and genomics, and its principal therapeutic areas are in cancer and neurodegenerative diseases. Oxford BioMedica plc was floated on the Alternative Investment Market of the London Stock Exchange in December 1996, and upgraded to the United Kingdom Listing Authority Official List in April 2001 following a successful £35.5 million fund-raising. Currently Oxford BioMedica has corporate collaborations with Aventis, AstraZeneca, IDM, Modex Therapeutics, Nycomed Amersham, Valentis, Virbac and Wyeth. BioMedica has two products in Phase I/II clinical trials: MetXia(R) for late-stage breast cancer (BC1) and ovarian cancer (OC1), and TroVaxTM for late-stage colorectal cancer. 2. Lentivirus vector systems In gene therapy, the aim is to deliver a gene and its necessary regulatory elements (the gene construct) to the cell surface, using a vector to mediate the transfer across the cell membrane and, in some cases, into the nucleus. A new and increasingly powerful vector system is based on lentiviruses, which have similar features to retroviruses in the ease of manipulation, predictable integration and reliable gene expression and regulation. However, their main advantage over retroviruses is the ability to function in non-dividing cells or cells that are dividing slowly - a feature of many clinically important tissues including the central and peripheral nervous system. 3. Types of lentiviruses Lentiviral vectors are constructed from two sources: - primate viruses e.g. human or simian immunodeficiency virus (HIV or SIV) - non-primate viruses e.g. feline and bovine immunodeficiency viruses (FIV and BIV), and one of the most simple, equine infective anaemia virus (EIAV) 4. BioMedica Inc. A key part of Oxford BioMedica's strategy for growth following its recent upgrade to the UKLA Official List and the successful £35.5 million fund-raising is to establish a significant business unit in the USA. BioMedica Inc. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Oxford BioMedica plc, and it plans to establish offices and laboratories on the US west coast. On 29 May 2001 BioMedica announced the appointment of Dr Doug Jolly as CEO of BioMedica Inc. 5. World Wide Web This release is also available on the World Wide Web at http:// www.oxfordbiomedica.co.uk
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