Featured Stories

  • The COVID Heart - One Year After SARS-CoV-2 Infection, Patients Have an Array of Increased Cardiovascular Risks

    The COVID Heart - One Year After SARS-CoV-2 Infection, Patients Have an Array of Increased Cardiovascular Risks Published March 2, 2022: JAMA doi: 10.1001/jama.2022.2411

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  • Long-term Cardiovascular Outcomes of COVID-19

    Long-term cardiovascular outcomes of COVID-19 Published Feb. 7, 2022: Nature Medecine  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-022-01689-3  

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  • Understanding Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Outcome Measures

    Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a rare, life-threatening condition characterized by elevated blood pressure in the arteries which carry blood from the heart to the lungs. The high blood...

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  • Calgary-based biotech firm specializes in instructing cells to fight complex diseases

    Imagine a world where a host of diseases and conditions caused by non-beneficial instructions from our DNA could be treated simply by instructing our cells to ignore those signals. That science is...

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  • Health Matters: Alberta-developed drug could help prevent long COVID

    Health Matters February 2: Calgary company Resverlogix has developed a drug that could not only stop COVID-19 illness from progressing, it also has potential to prevent chronic symptoms, or long...

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  • Calgary Company's COVID Drug Going to Phase Two Trials

    Calgary-based biotech company Resverlogix moves into a phase two clinical trial for an oral treatment Apabetalone for COVID-19. And they are looking for patients to participate in the study....

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  • Made-in-Alberta drug being tested on COVID-19 patients

    New drug trial to treat COVID-19 patients has been launched at the University of Alberta. Hiba Kamal-Choufi reports.

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  • 'Exciting breakthrough': COVID-19 drug trial to take place in Edmonton

    Trials for a Canadian-developed COVID-19 treatment are set to begin at the University of Alberta. CTV News Edmonton - Aired January 24, 2022

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  • An Alberta-developed oral treatment for COVID-19 has begun testing at the University of Alberta hospital

    J'lyn Nye interviews RVX President & CEO Donald McCaffrey about our Phase 2b COVID-19 Clinical Trial on 630 CHED

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  • Some COVID-19 patients in Edmonton begin potential trial treatment, apabetalone, an Alberta-developed drug

    By Kellen Taniguchi Edmonton Journal, January 18, 2022  

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  • Epigenetic Therapies Start Operating Outside the Lines

    Drug developers are sourcing novel structures, bridging transcriptional and signaling domains, and exploring applications beyond oncology GEN: Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News...

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  • Resverlogix in Active Discussions with Morocco

    Resverlogix is in active discussions for COVID-19 clinical studies in Morocco involving apabetalone.

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  • Donald McCaffrey at Benzinga All Access

    Resverlogix President & CEO Donald McCaffrey presents at Benzinga All Access conference 2021

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  • Resverlogix: The Future of Drug Development

    Clip of Donald McCaffrey, President & CEO of Resverlogix which aired on Fox News December 18, 2021.   © 2021 www.B-TV.com . All Rights Reserved.  

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  • Apabetalone meets primary endpoint in PAH pilot study

    Resverlogix reported that its lead drug apabetalone met its primary endpoint in a pulmonary arterial hypertension or ‘PAH’ investigator led pilot study. Watch the news...

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  • EVERSANA & Resverlogix Discuss Partnership On PharmaVOICE Webinar

    Rohit Sood, EVP, COMPLETE Commercialization, EVERSANA / Donald McCaffrey, President & CEO, Resverlogix: Next Generation Commercial Innovation: Moving From Promise to Practice. 

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  • Donald McCaffrey featured on Innovators with Jane King

    Donald McCaffrey, President & CEO of Resverlogix featured on Innovators with Jane King. Latest updates on the Company's COVID-19 program.

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  • COVID-19 Program Update with Donald McCaffrey

    CEO Donald McCaffrey joined PBA à Noon, for a live webinar and Q&A, to discuss the latest developments in Resverlogix' COVID-19 program.

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  • Health Canada Authorizes COVID-19 Clinical Study

    Resverlogix receives "No Objection Letter" from Health Canada, approving the COVID-19 Clinical Trial Application for apabetalone.

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  • Apabetalone May Prevent Heart Damage Caused by COVID-19

    COVID-19 affects not only lung and respiratory tissue but can injure your heart as well. One study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, found that 78% of recently...

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  • Balancing Epigenetics in the Treatment of Chronic Kidney Disease

    Kidneys are the body’s filtration system . They clean our blood, removing waste and helping manage blood pressure by controlling the outflow of water. Unfortunately, when these filters...

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  • Targeting Epigenetics as a New Therapy in Vascular Disease and Dementia

    Cardiovascular disease literally means disease of the heart and blood vessels, but it can cause additional life-altering complications that we might not initially associate with the disease,...

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  • The Faces of Cardiovascular Disease: Series Final

    This is the final article of the mini-series, The Faces of Cardiovascular Disease , looking at the different presentations, symptoms, and root causes of a disease that affects millions of men...

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  • The Faces of Cardiovascular Disease: Part 4

    This article is part of a mini-series, The Faces of Cardiovascular Disease , looking at the different presentations, symptoms, and root causes of a disease that affects millions of men and women...

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  • The Faces of Cardiovascular Disease: Part 3

    This article is part of a mini-series, The Faces of Cardiovascular Disease , looking at the different presentations, symptoms, and root causes of a disease that affects millions of men and women...

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  • The Faces of Cardiovascular Disease: Part 2

    This article is part of a mini-series, The Faces of Cardiovascular Disease , looking at the different presentations, symptoms, and root causes of a disease that affects millions of men and women...

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  • The Faces of Cardiovascular Disease: Part 1

    This article is part of a mini-series we are calling The Faces of Cardiovascular Disease , looking at the different presentations, symptoms, and root causes of a disease that affects millions of...

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  • Apabetalone: A Relative Size Animation

    Our lead compound – apabetalone – is the first small molecule of its kind with potentially important benefits for patients with high-risk cardiovascular and other chronic diseases. But...

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  • Understanding Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Outcome Measures

    Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a rare, life-threatening condition characterized by elevated blood pressure in the arteries which carry blood from the heart to the lungs. The high blood pressure means that the heart needs to work harder to supply the lungs with blood, which weakens the heart over time, and can eventually lead to heart failure. Recently, a pilot study – APPRoAcH-p – evaluating apabetalone for the treatment of PAH was completed, showing promising early results.

    Publication Highlights Include:

    • All patients completed the 16-week trial without discontinuation or dose reduction, suggesting that apabetalone was well tolerated in the study population
    • Patients treated with apabetalone exhibited a reduction in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) at 16 weeks, the key exploratory efficacy endpoint of the study
    • Apabetalone treatment was also associated with improved cardiac output (CO) and stroke volume (SV) over the 16-week treatment course

    This primer provides a brief overview of the outcome measures used to evaluate PAH treatments, and how to interpret the findings of this study.

    Overview

    The circulatory system contains two circuits: 1. the systemic circuit, in which oxygen-rich blood is pumped throughout the body, oxygenating tissues and carrying away carbon dioxide; and 2. the pulmonary circuit, in which deoxygenated blood returning from the body is pumped through the lungs to replenish its oxygen and expel carbon dioxide. High blood pressure in the second circuit, the pulmonary circuit, is what characterizes PAH.

    Pulmonary Vascular Resistance

    What is it:

    The resistance that the heart must overcome to pump blood from the right ventricle, through the lungs, and into the left atrium is called the Pulmonary Vascular Resistance (PVR)

    How is it related to PAH:

    Pulmonary vascular resistance is higher than normal in patients with PAH. With PAH disease progression, blood vessels within the lungs narrow, increasing the overall resistance to blood flowing through the lungs. To compensate for the added resistance the heart must work harder to continue pumping blood through the lungs. Reducing pulmonary vascular resistance would be a positive outcome for a PAH patient.

    Stroke Volume

    What is it:

    The volume of blood leaving the right ventricle, and going to the lungs, with each heartbeat is known as the right ventricular Stroke Volume (SV).

    How is it related to PAH:

    Stroke volume is lower than normal in patients with PAH. Higher resistance to blood flow in the pulmonary circuit reduces the amount of blood pumped out of the right ventricle with each heartbeat. Increasing stroke volume would be a positive outcome for a PAH patient, as it is a direct measure of right ventricular function. A 2011 study found that 8 to 12 mL increase in stroke volume would represent a clinically significant improvement.

    Cardiac Output

    What is it:

    The total volume of blood being pumped out of the right ventricle each minute is known as the right ventricular Cardiac Output (CO). It is calculated by multiplying the stroke volume (volume per heartbeat) with the heartrate (heartbeats per minute).

    How is it related to PAH:

    In the early stages of PAH, cardiac output is often within the normal range. As the stroke volume decreases, a patients average heartrate increases to compensate for the reduced blood flow. As the disease progresses, and the heart begins to weaken, this compensation may no longer be possible and cardiac output may drop. Increasing cardiac output in PAH patients may be a positive outcome, as it could indicate improved right ventricular function.

    Mean Pulmonary Arterial Pressure

    What is it:

    Mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAP) is the pressure measured in the pulmonary artery, which carries blood from right ventricle of the heart into the lungs. It combines systolic pulmonary arterial pressure – the higher pressure measured when the heart beats, with the diastolic pulmonary arterial pressure – the lower pressure measured between heartbeats.

    How is it related to PAH:

    Mean pulmonary arterial pressure is a key diagnostic criteria for PAH. When vascular resistance in the lungs is increased, the pressure in the pulmonary artery rises as the right ventricle forces blood through the pulmonary circuit. Even mildly elevated pulmonary arterial pressure is associated with higher risk of disease progression and mortality.

    Right Atrial Pressure

    What is it:

    The Right Atrial (RA) pressure is blood pressure measured in the right atrium of the heart, where deoxygenated blood collects as it returns from the body.

    How is it related to PAH:

    Right atrial pressure is an established prognostic measure in PAH. One-way valves in the heart ensure that blood only flows in one direction, so when the right ventricle encounters more resistance to pumping blood through the pulmonary circuit pressure within the right atrium increases in tandem. Higher right atrial pressure is associated with worse outcomes, including increased risk of mortality in PAH patients. Lowering right atrial pressure would be a positive outcome.

    Summary

    The APPRoAcH-p study evaluated the potential of apabetalone as a treatment for PAH, measuring key hemodynamic parameters at baseline and following 16 weeks of apabetalone treatment. Over the course of the trial, meaningful improvements in pulmonary vascular resistance, stroke volume, and cardiac output were observed in nearly all study participants. Small decreases in right atrial and mean pulmonary arterial pressure were also seen on average. Though early, these results are very encouraging and highlight the need for a larger study of apabetalone for PAH.