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Painreform Ltd. is a clinical stage specialty pharmaceutical company focused on the reformulation of established therapeutics.
Its proprietary extended release drug-delivery system is designed to provide an extended period of post-surgical pain relief without the need for repeated dose administration while reducing the potential need for the use of opiates very often administered post surgically.
Company incorporates generic drugs which have been proven safe and effective with our proprietary extended release drug-delivery system in order to create a major improvement in therapy via extended release drug products and to take advantage of the 505(b)(2) regulatory pathway created by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”). The 505(b)(2) new drug application (“NDA”) process, provides for FDA approval of a new drug based in part on data that was developed by others, including published literature references and data previously reviewed by the FDA in its approval of a separate application. Using this pathway can significantly reduce the future time and costs associated with clinical development.
PRF-110, our first product, is based on the local anesthetic ropivacaine, targeting the post-operative pain relief market. PRF-110 is an oil-based, viscous, waterless and clear solution that is deposited directly into the surgical wound bed prior to closure to provide localized and extended post-operative analgesia.
In a Phase 2 proof-of-concept clinical study in herniorrhaphy (hernia repair), PRF-110 provided substantial pain reduction for up to 72 hours post-operatively. A comparison of these results to historical data for ropivacaine alone suggests a substantial advantage to using PRF-110 over the local anesthetic, ropivacaine, alone. As indicated in the FDA approved drug description for ropivacaine, such drug provides pain relief for only 2 to 6 hours.
The surgeons that participated in the PRF-110 Phase 2 trial reported that it was easily integrated into the procedure and non-disruptive of existing surgical techniques. Ropivacaine, the active drug used in PRF-110, is a safe and well characterized local anesthetic and the other components that make up the remainder of the PRF-110 formulation are classified as GRAS (Generally Regarded As Safe) by the FDA, mitigating many potential safety issues that are common in drug development. In a phase 1 safety study, healthy volunteers were treated with subcutaneous PRF-110.
In that study no serious adverse events were noted and PRF-110 showed a prolonged pain reduction when the subjects, although having intact (not cut skin) were tested for their responses to mild or moderate pain stimuli.