Guest guest Posted May 23, 2002 Report Share Posted May 23, 2002 I have read with great interest the postings concerning the company that I current am employed by regarding the results of a clinical study performed by us to determine the effectiveness of our lotion in treating the symptoms associated with cea. There seems to be some misconceptions about the company, the studies performed, and the motives behind our launch next week. I would like to provide the forum with details about Cutanix- the who, what, and where. First of all, my posting here is not meant to be any type of marketing ploy. I was contacted by one of your members this morning via e-mail and was asked about our topical product offering set to be launched next week. The individual was nice enough to seek me out and write me so I wrote him back. We began a series of 10 e-mails throughout the day that resulted in my becoming familiar with this board. I was amazed to see how much enthusiasm (and misinformation) had been discussed and thought I should set the record straight. I contacted the forum moderator directly and asked if I could post to the forum and obtained permission from him before setting out on this post. First of all, let me tell you about myself. My name is K. Pilcher and I hold a Doctorate (Ph.D.) in Cell Biology and Anatomy from the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine (1990-1994). I spent by postdoctoral training years (1994-1998) at Washington University in St. Louis, -Jewish Hospital in Dermatology under Dr. Welgus (Currently Executive Director of Inflammation Therapeutics and Anaderm for Pfizer in Ann Arbor, Michigan)studying the role of degradative enzymes in wound healing and skin biology. I then joined the departments of Cell Biology and Dermatology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, Texas. While there, I performed contract research work for Cutanix studying the effects of their proprietary compounds on sking aging while continuing my main research interests on how skin responds to injury. If interested, my research interests are still posted on their website: http://www2.utsouthwestern.edu/gradschool/webrib/pilcher.htm I joined Cutanix full time in August of 2002 as Director of Research when their Research and Development Facilities were established in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Dr. Fuller is the Chief Technical Officer for Cutanix. As stated in a previous message, he was affiliated with another startup biotech company called MelanX that was a venture started by The University of Oklahoma (not Illinois as stated in the previous post). MelanX was started around Dr. Fuller's patented technology for stimulating and inhibiting pigmentation naturally and without ultraviolet radiation. His association with this company ended in 1996. Cutanix has since licensed Dr. Fuller's patented technology and is currently developing novel topical formulations of natural tan stimulators and inhibitors (skin lighteners). Dr. Fuller still maintains his relationship with The University of Oklahoma while in his position with Cutanix. (Side note- Cutanix licensed the Dr. Fuller's patents from The University of Oklahoma). Now, about Cutanix. Up until August 2001, Cutanix operated as a " virtual company " in that they had no R&D facilities and contracted out all of the initial basic science studies to identify novel molecules that may have anti-inflammatory and anti-aging properties for use in dermatologic conditions. Many start-ups typically operate this way initially. The contract research was performed as Sponsored Research in Dr. Fuller's lab at OUHSC and in my lab at UT Southwestern. When we identified quadrinone it was formulated into a cosmetically acceptable lotion and tested for in vivo efficacy in a pilot clinical study. This study was double-blinded and placebo controlled (as all of our studies are and have been). When the lead compound was demonstrated to be effective in blocking UV-induced sunburn, another round of fund raising was completed and the R&D facilities were established in 2001. That is when I was asked to join the company as Director of Research. Currently, the R&D staff are made up of Dr. Fuller, Chief Technical Officer; Myself, Dr. Pilcher, Director of Research; 4 Full-time Research Associates; 2 Part-time Research Associates; Two Graduate Students; and One Office Manager. Since then Cutanix has established in vitro screening methods to identify new novel molecules for its pipeline, performed clinical studies for rosacea and eczema, submitted three grants- two to the Oklahoma Center for Advancement of Science and Technology and One to the National Institutes of Health (SBIR mechanism). In addition, I transferred my NIH grant to the company and thus, pay my own salary. Furthermore, we have only performed three clinical studies- one each for sunburn, rosacea, and eczema (not multiple studies as was posted earleir). We are a small company with a small R&D budget and clinical studies are not cheap. We have finally gotten to the point in our lifespan that we are ready to launch. Because of our clinical results we are excited at the potential for this lotion to help relieve the symptoms associated with various skin conditions. Lastly, I would like to respond to comments that are misleading and untrue. Please understand that I am trying to respond in a calm and cogent manner, rather than flame someone. 1.Issues of efficacy and safety. Our Dramatic Relief topical lotion has been tested in all clinical tests in a double blinded and placebo controlled fashion. The two page report that I have seen circulating on the internet (and on this board) was released by our CEO, Engles, to an individual. It was not a Press Release. In fact, our whole marketing staff is made up of 2 consultants and our budget is miniscule. This particular individual, Rory I believe, then posted and disseminated the information. As such, the clinical report was meant to speak to the layman, certainly not a peer-reviewed scientific piece. The results speak for themselves- the only issue I have seen was regarding the method of the study. I assure you that this is the only cea study we have done and we are reporting all of the results. Again, it was double blinded and placebo controlled- that information was simply not included in the original document sent to Rory. Safety- I have had a number of individuals ask me what the ingredients of the topical formulation are. I will post those tomorrow when I get back into the office. Our active ingredient- called Quadrinone- is currently undergoing patent protection, so for obvious reasons I cannot tell you what it is exactly. I can tell you, however, that it is a naturally occuring molecule that is on the FDA GRAS list (generally recognized as safe). We have performed a number of our own toxicologic tests on the lotion (active included) formulation using an independent preclinical testing company and it is non-irritating and non-sensitizing. 2. Published studies. With all due respect to Dr. Lazoff, Medical Society journals are not the only " Top Medical Journals " . The Journal of Investigative Dermatology is the premier research journal for the Society of Investigative Dermatology. The other top society in the Dermatology field in America is the American Academy of Dermatology (where we will pressent in 2003). The JID is peer reviewed and considered by derms in the field to be " the " journal for dermatologic basic science research. Incidentally, Dr. Zoe Draelos, the Dermatologist who has performed all of our clinical studies is a past President of the American Academy of Dermatology. The phrase " plan to be published " refers to the fact that we are currently writing the manuscripts. A typical method of publishing one's results (whether they be academic or industry) is to first present them in poster form at a National Conference. We presented the cea results at the SID conference that was held in Los Angeles last week. We are now in the process of writing the papers and they will be submitted for peer revies shortly. I understand the skepticism demonstrated by members of the forum regarding our clinical results. Yes, we performed them with a clinical dermatologist and not by an independent university center. Simply put, our R&D budget could not afford the studies discussed. Again, All Three Studies We Have Done Have Been Double Blinded and Placebo Controlled. I only described the rosacea study because that is the one I was asked about. 3. Ulterior motives. I responded to because I was pleased he had even heard of us! I assure you that there is no ulterior marketing machine at work. All in all, Cutanix R&D is made up of 10 full time employees with a few consultants filling in important areas (HR, marketing, etc). Two- the CEO and Administator are in Santa Clara and the rest of us are in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma at the R&D facility. We are living up to our full mission statement as I wrote it to - " Cutanix's mission is to perform rigorous cell and molecular biology > on our proprietary active molecules, formulate them in cosmetically > acceptable lotions (non-irritating and non-comedogenic), assess how > much is driven into the skin using Franz cell analysis, and perform > rigorous clinical studies to test efficacy in vivo. Our clinical > work is double-blinded and placebo controlled " I sent the free sample to simply because he asked for it to try. I personally don't have a marketing director telling me what to do- we don't have one! I just thought it a good will gesture. 4. Website. We realize that our website is very rudimentary. I believe I saw the word " pathetic " used in a previous post and you'll get no argument here. We are frantically working on getting an elegant website up and running to replace the current version and it should be up within a couple of weeks. It will be a work in progress so please be patient! In sum, Cutanix is hoping for a product that works. Why would we want to sell anything short of something cosmetically elegant that improves your symptoms? It would be company suicide to do anything different. Respectfully, K. Pilcher, Ph.D. Director of Research Cutanix Corporation Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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