Here's the patent kythera purchased the rights to. It states the the application will be topical, although no mention has been made about the delivery, besides this.
Kythera Acquires Rights to PGD2 Blocking Setipriprant for New Hair Loss Treatment
Collapse
X
-
-
I don't know if you have ever seen this doc, so I share : http://files.shareholder.com/downloa...5BFA2E/KYTHERA
Page 6 and nextComment
-
Here's the patent kythera purchased the rights to. It states the the application will be topical, although no mention has been made about the delivery, besides this.
https://www.google.com/patents/WO2013142295A1?cl=enComment
-
If you look up follica's patents, they have many different ways of wounding. I know one of their techniques involved using lasers. They've put a lot of work into to developing the procedure - quite impressive. Check them out:
http://www.faqs.org/patents/assignee/follica-inc/
I asked because earlier in this very long thread I read that the preventative treatment may be released in conjunction with bimatoprost and a wounding protocol for regrowth. I don't know if that was correct or not. I'm on a slow connection so it would take about five minutes to page back.
I have abnormal scarring so I would like to know if wounding would due more harm than good to me, were it ever to become viable.
We need a collection of all the available primary documents surrounding these new treatments so folks can look through them all in one place. I see people referencing "the articles" but they are linked sporadically. Maybe I'll collect them up.Comment
-
How do you 100% know anything about this?
and in their shareholders presentation they clearly say it will be an oral drug
For anyone interested, a couple of years ago I created a thread with all the information I could find and my opinion.
Just thought I would bring forward some key points about Cotsarelis/Garza's research. They are still the only team who have directly studied AGA in the hope of finding the underlying mechanisms of the disease. The take the logical approach of actually comparing bald vs non-bald scalp for genetic/enzymatic differences. They
Yes, this is all just basic science, and noone is saying it is a cure. There a no major side effects, headaches drowsiness etc are "side-effects" seen in almost every trial and some people think that something as trivial as a vitamin pill can give you those side effects...
The positives far way out the negatives, by leaps and bounds.Comment
-
I only mention these side effects because the percentages were very high, the incidence of such effects is very high with other antihistamines, and there is a withdrawal effect from these drugs that is not talked about even by many doctors. There are always low percentages of people that report headaches and drowsiness, but not at these percentages. If that's too hard to understand I don't know how else to say it. Talk to anyone who has taken zyrtec. I too hope that the side effects will be outweighed by the positives. Just don't get your hopes too high.
Also, Kythera purchased cotsarellis' patents, but that doesn't mean they will follow those patents. From their shareholders presentation its pretty obvious they plan to develop and test this as a pill. Is it possible to make it a topical? who knows, probably. Either way the side effect shouldn't vary much.Comment
-
Also, Kythera purchased cotsarellis' patents, but that doesn't mean they will follow those patents. From their shareholders presentation its pretty obvious they plan to develop and test this as a pill. Is it possible to make it a topical? who knows, probably. Either way the side effect shouldn't vary much.Comment
-
It's been posted, but I'll repost. Here's an audio recording from people at Kythera discussing this drug for hair loss:
https://clyp.it/41mcx0mb
This is no big deal yet, they have no idea how it will work in vivo. Ramatroban keeps hair growing in vitro as well. Hopefully it wrks, but certainly no guarantees. Propecia maintains hair and grows a good amount in many people, so there's no way this gets released if it isn't as good, and other PGD2 receptor blockers have not panned out very well in unofficial trials.Comment
-
I only mention these side effects because the percentages were very high, the incidence of such effects is very high with other antihistamines, and there is a withdrawal effect from these drugs that is not talked about even by many doctors. There are always low percentages of people that report headaches and drowsiness, but not at these percentages. If that's too hard to understand I don't know how else to say it. Talk to anyone who has taken zyrtec. I too hope that the side effects will be outweighed by the positives. Just don't get your hopes too high.
Also, Kythera purchased cotsarellis' patents, but that doesn't mean they will follow those patents. From their shareholders presentation its pretty obvious they plan to develop and test this as a pill. Is it possible to make it a topical? who knows, probably. Either way the side effect shouldn't vary much.
"Setipiprant was well tolerated at the tested dose, with no apparent effects on clinical laboratory variables, vital signs, weight, ECG variables, or ECG morphology. In total, 10 of 20 subjects reported at least one adverse event (AE) during the study. Headache was the most frequently reported AE (in 25% of subjects), followed by flatulence (15%) and somnolence and fatigue (10%). Only 1 case of headache, 1 case of somnolence, and 2 cases of fatigue were judged to be related to study drug by the investigator.
No AEs of severe intensity and no serious AEs were reported during the study. One case of moderate headache (1 man, treatment A) and 2 cases of moderate fatigue (2 women, treatment B) were reported; all other AEs were rated to be of mild intensity by the investigator. All AEs resolved without sequelae. The AE incidence in men and women and between treatments was similar."Comment
-
Cool. Thanks for elucidating. I get bad sides from everything, and when I take zyrtec or claritin I get mild headaches and sometimes bad drowsiness. Might expect similar from this drug, a lot will probably tolerate it better, and some worse. I'm still most concerned about the withdrawal possibility after years of use, and would love to be able to talk to an expert about it. Sucks that kythera has no email.Comment
-
Yes, also other PGD2 inhibitors have the same effect, but they chose this drug because of "specificity and safety."Comment
-
That is the point of all the new possible treatments coming out (CB, Sm, Septipripant, Replicel, Histogen and even Pilofocus).
Replicel has the best safety profile. However I am betting that Histogen has the best effectivity.
In the end the more of them come out, more options we hive. I'm sure there will be people using all of them at once.Comment
-
Why is everyone on this forum so stuck on exclusive usage of treatments. I mean if Replicel and Setipripant both come out, you could use both of them.
That is the point of all the new possible treatments coming out (CB, Sm, Septipripant, Replicel, Histogen and even Pilofocus).
Replicel has the best safety profile. However I am betting that Histogen has the best effectivity.
In the end the more of them come out, more options we hive. I'm sure there will be people using all of them at once.Comment
Comment