TSI Preps for Trials of New Clot-Busting Drug

Ever since Genentech’s clot dissolver known as tissue plasminogen activator, or tPA, hit the market 15 years ago, the pharmaceutical industry has been laboring to come up with something to solve the drug’s main drawback: It has to be given within three hours of a stroke. The folks at Cambridge, MA-based Thrombolytic Science International (TSI) believe they can vastly increase that time window with a drug that will enter clinical trials by the end of this quarter.

TSI was founded in 2006 based on science discovered by the company’s co-founder, Harvard medicine professor Victor Gurewich. He licensed an enzyme called prourokinase (proUK) and participated in research proving that it, too, can dissolve clots—but without the time worries that come with tPA, and with more precise targeting.

One big reason companies are still searching for alternatives to tPA is that it often takes more than three hours for a stroke victim to realize what’s happened to them—let alone to seek treatment. That’s why tPA is only given to about five percent of patients, according to a study in the journal Stroke. “What’s exciting with proUK is the mechanism of action leads to a window of treatment of six hours,” says Alexis Wallace, CEO of TSI.

Wallace says TSI’s drug, called TS01, may offer a safety advantage, as well. That’s because there are two types of clots—“occlusive,” which are the bad kind, and “hemostatic,” which are the normal clots that prevent excessive blood loss—and tPA destroys both. TS01, on the other hand, only busts up the occlusive clots, which may reduce the risk of bleeding that’s commonly seen with tPA. “That’s the main interest in pushing proUK,” Wallace says.

Several pharmaceutical companies tried working with proUK in the 1990s, but struggled to keep the enzyme stable enough so it would only target

Author: Arlene Weintraub

Arlene is an award-winning journalist specializing in life sciences and technology. She was previously a senior health writer based out of the New York City headquarters of BusinessWeek, where she wrote hundreds of articles that explored both the science and business of health. Her freelance pieces have been published in USA Today, US News & World Report, Technology Review, and other media outlets. Arlene has won awards from the New York Press Club, the Association of Health Care Journalists, the Foundation for Biomedical Research, and the American Society of Business Publication Editors. Her book about the anti-aging industry, Selling the Fountain of Youth, was published by Basic Books in September 2010.