Audio By Carbonatix
Dr Peter Atadja, a Ghanaian Pharmacist is developing an anti-cancer therapy that would hit the market next year.
The drug, which is at the trial stages, is awaiting certification from the World Health Organization before it is branded.
This was disclosed by Mr Maxwell Atadja, Chief Executive Officer of Life Door Pharmacy and Mr Patrick Amponsah-Frempah, Medical Representative of the company to the Ghana News Agency in Accra on Wednesday.
It was during the launch of the current trends in the treatment of malaria in collaboration with Lupin Limited, a leading India multi- national pharmaceutical company.
Dr Atadja, who was the brain behind Life Door Pharmacy, a Ghanaian limited liability company, was a product of Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology and Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel.
While in Israel, he made critical contributions to the pioneering work of his mentors Professors Alex Levitzki and Michael Chorev in the designing and developing of first-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitors (Tyrphostins) for anti-cancer therapy.
This work was recognized with his Master of Science degree, (Magna Cum Laude) in Pharmaceutical and Medicinal Chemistry and the Hebrew University's Michael Sherwood Prize for graduate research.
Peter Atadja obtained his Ph.D. in Molecular and Cellular Oncology from the University of Calgary, Canada, where his research yielded important fundamental observations in molecular mechanisms of cellular senescence and their linkage with tumor suppressor pathways.
In 1997, he joined Novartis Pharmaceuticals in New Jersey to work on their efforts to develop drugs that target epigenetic mechanisms for anti-cancer therapy.
Dr Atadja's productive research at Novartis has led to the development of LBH589, a histone deacetylase inhibitor that was discovered and developed preclinically in his laboratory, which has shown dramatic responses in cutaneous T-cell lymphoma and is now undergoing further clinical development in additional hematologic and solid malignancies.
He is currently a Group Leader and Senior Research Investigator at the Novartis Institutes for Biomedical.
Professor Fred Binka, a lecturer at the Ghana Medical School of the University of Ghana (UG) Legon, observed that the fight against malaria has been recognized worldwide, adding that the disease is treatable and preventable and must not be allowed to kill anybody.
Stressing on the home management of malaria, he said since people could diagnose the disease, it is important that they are allowed to treat it.
He said Ghana is adopting a new approach for the treatment of diseases that would facilitate contact with producers of potent drugs worldwide to ensure the payment of the investment they made into the manufacturing of their products so they would not prolong the patent period.
Dr Obeng Adjei of the Centre for Tropical Clinical Pharmacology and Thereupatics, UG, who gave a presentation on "Current trends in the treatment of malaria- the Ghanaian context", tasked researchers to come out with a malaria drugs that could well manage hypertensive patients and people living with HIV/AIDS.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Ofori-Atta’s reported Green Card status signals US does not fully agree with Process – Kofi Bentil
2 minutes -
High Court issues interim injunction over Afigya Sekyere East NPP polling station album
14 minutes -
Interdiction is ridiculous — Ofori-Boadu demands stronger punishment for teachers who sexually abuse students
29 minutes -
We expect sanctions for both teacher and student in Bole SHS misconduct case – Clement Apaak
45 minutes -
Teacher, student both culpable under GES code in Bole SHS misconduct case – Clement Apaak
48 minutes -
Even if it’s just two or three schools, we ought to be worried — Deputy Education Minister on Ghana’s student misconduct crisis
51 minutes -
Bole SHS teacher violated professional code by engaging student sexually – Deputy Education Minister
57 minutes -
University campuses have no security — Gloria Ofori-Boadu calls for urgent safety policy reforms
1 hour -
Bentil calls for thorough probe into UCC student death, warns against premature conclusions
1 hour -
Education ministry, GES must act decisively to curb rising student indiscipline – Tuah-Yeboah
1 hour -
Almost nobody wants to enforce rules in our schools – Kofi Bentil
1 hour -
Who is in charge? — Kofi Bentil questions parents over school discipline crisis
1 hour -
Livestream: Ofori-Atta US residency, public sector resignations and student safety take centre stage on Newsfile
2 hours -
Timber Millers condemn attack on Forestry Commission checkpoint in Bono East
2 hours -
‘My father wanted me on the farm, my mother wanted me in school’ — Sissala East MP
2 hours