Thursday, June 17, 2010

ProFibrix and CSL Behring Enter Into Fibrinogen and Thrombin Supply Agreement

LEIDEN, The Netherlands and SEATTLE, June 17, 2010 /PRNewswire/ -- ProFibrix B.V., a leader in the development of innovative products for hemostasis and regenerative medicine, today announced that it has entered into an agreement with CSL Behring for the clinical and commercial supply of plasma-based fibrinogen and thrombin, for the manufacturing of Fibrocaps(TM). CSL Behring is a leader in the plasma protein therapeutics industry and a subsidiary of CSL Limited (ASX: CSL), a global biopharmaceutical company headquartered in Melbourne, Australia.
Jaap Koopman, CEO of ProFibrix said: "We are extremely pleased with the supply agreement with CSL Behring. CSL Behring is one of the acknowledged global leaders in the plasma protein therapeutic industry. Importantly, the agreement will enable us to use CSL Behring's fibrinogen and thrombin, approved in markets around the world, as active components in our lead product Fibrocaps. This will offer us a tremendous advantage with regulatory authorities when seeking approval for Fibrocaps."

About Fibrocaps
Fibrocaps is based on a mixture of two essential blood clotting proteins, fibrinogen and thrombin, and is a unique dry powder topical tissue sealant in development to stop bleeding after or during surgery. Fibrocaps is clearly differentiated from existing liquid tissue sealants and hemostats: it is ready for immediate use, is stable at room temperature, and has shown to be safe and efficacious in the first Phase II study conducted in EU. ProFibrix is starting a global Phase II study in the summer of 2010.

Salient Surgical goes Dutch


ccccccccccccccccccccSalient Surgical Technologies Inc. is going Dutch, opening an office in Amsterdam to spearhead its international sales and marketing efforts.
The Portsmouth, N.H.-based company said it's had a presence in Europe since 2001, when it began marketing a line of surgical sealers, but wants to expand that footprint with its Aquamantys electrosurgical cautery system.
Citing positive results from clinical trials of the device in joint replacement and spine procedures, Salient Surgical said it's aiming to make the system the global standard of care for reducing bleeding during surgery.
Earlier this month Salient and Medtronic Inc. (NYSE:MDT) slapped Bovie Medical Corp. (NYSE:BVX) with a patent infringement lawsuit over the technology used in the Aquamantys system.
The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for Delaware, accuses Bovie Medical of violating a trio of patents licensed to Portsmouth, N.H.-based Salient with its SEER fluid-assisted electrosurgical system. It seeks a jury trial, a permanent injunction on further infringement, damages on lost royalties and legal fees.
Salient, founded as TissueLink Medical in 1999, banked $15 million from its seventh funding roundin January. Its backers include Medtronic — which owns a nearly 9 percent stake in the company — TLM Investors, QuestMark Advisors and the RiverVest Venture Fund.