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Our Science
Anthracyclines have been the most widely used and most effective category of cancer chemotherapeutics for decades, however efficacy comes with serious toxicity. Patients are limited to strict lifetime limits of anthracycline doses to reduce the risk of permanent and irreversible damage to the cardiovascular system.
Bisantrene is a small-molecule anthracene that was originally developed by Lederle Laboratories (American Cyanamid) in the 1970s & 1980s with the goal of creating an alternative chemotherapeutic with a lower risk of cardiotoxicity.
The drug was approved in France for relapsed or refractory (R/R) acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in 1988, however it was not commercialised due to clinical prioritisation of mitoxantrone by Lederle.
Bisantrene has been evaluated in over 50 clinical trials with more than 1,500 patients treated, demonstrating efficacy and a well characterised safety profile.
Studies have shown bisantrene is an effective anticancer chemotherapeutic and lower cardiotoxicity than currently used anthracyclines. Recent preclinical studies have discovered that bisantrene is not only less cardiotoxic than anthracyclines, but when used in combination is able to protect hearts from anthracycline cardiotoxicity while also improving targeting of the cancer.
Reformulated bisantrene – RC220
One of the major factors contributing to Lederle abandoning clinical development of bisantrene in favour of the related anthracene chemotherapeutic mitoxantrone was the inability to deliver bisantrene via peripheral infusion. Rapid crystallisation of bisantrene at pH above 6 required that bisantrene be delivered by an invasive central line catheter. This restricted the use of bisantrene to hospital environments and cancer indications where central line administration is standard such as high intensity chemotherapy in leukaemias despite trying to reformulate the drug to improve its solubility.
Race has developed a novel formulation of bisantrene (RC220) designed to allow administration via a peripheral vein while maintaining the pharmacokinetics and anticancer activity of the historical formulation (RC110). cGMP manufacturing of RC220 was completed at Ardena in Q1 2024.