Study Examines Complete Response and Induced Immune Response That May
Produce “Bystander Effect” Seen in Patients
Data Will Be Featured in Two Highlighted Poster Presentations at the
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting, McCormick
Place in Chicago, IL, June 2, 2014

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. -- (Business Wire)
Provectus Biopharmaceuticals, Inc. (OTCQB:PVCT) (http://www.pvct.com),
a development-stage oncology and dermatology biopharmaceutical company,
announced today that data on its investigational agent PV-10 for
intralesional (IL) treatment of locally advanced cutaneous melanoma will
be featured in two presentations in the Poster Highlights Session,
Melanoma/Skin Cancers, on June 2, 2014 during the American Society of
Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting to be held at McCormick Place,
Chicago, IL. These presentations show that IL PV-10 (a) can potentially
offer cancer patients control of their cutaneous symptoms and (b) elicit
a systemic anti-tumor immune response that may lead to response of
uninjected lesions (the “bystander effect” that has been observed in
prior clinical studies of PV-10).
The first highlighted poster, presented by Sanjiv S. Agarwala, MD, of
the St. Luke’s Cancer Center, based upon abstract #132320 (permanent ID
9027), is entitled “Efficacy of intralesional rose bengal in patients
receiving injection in all existing melanoma in phase II study
PV-10-MM-02.”
The second highlighted poster, presented by Amod Sarnaik, MD, of Moffitt
Cancer Center, based upon abstract #132288 (permanent ID 9028), is
entitled "Assessment of immune and clinical efficacy after intralesional
PV-10 in injected and uninjected metastatic melanoma lesions."
Dr. Agarwala and co-authors from 7 prominent melanoma centers in the
United States and Australia studied the safety and efficacy of IL PV-10
in an 80 patient international, multicenter, single arm phase 2 trial. A
subgroup analysis of 28 patients with all existing melanoma lesions
injected and an additional 26 patients with only 1-2 uninjected
bystander lesions showed that these patients experienced an
exceptionally high rate of response. The best overall response rate
(BORR) in the 28-patient “all treated” subgroup was 71% (confidence
interval of 51-87%), with 50% complete response (CI 31-69%). Among the
54 patients in both of these subgroups (i.e., patients who had all of
their disease monitored in the study), CR (Complete Response) was
achieved in 232 of 363 injected lesions (64% CR). Furthermore, CR was
achieved in 121 lesions after a single injection of PV-10; 84 lesions
required 2 injections to achieve CR; 22 lesions required 3 injections;
and 5 lesions required all four allowed 4 injections.
Dr. Agarwala said, “The high rate of symptom control in refractory
patients with disease limited to the skin, manifested in CR of all
monitored disease after minimal intervention, is the basis for a pending
breakthrough therapy designation application for PV-10. Although the
primary ablative effect is responsible for CR in injected lesions,
durability of response and bystander response observed in this study
implicate an immunologic mechanism of action secondary to ablation.”
In the Moffitt poster, Dr. Sarnaik and co-authors report interim results
of a pilot clinical trial designed to investigate the immunologic basis
of this bystander response. In this single institution translational
study, a target lesion and a bystander were biopsied prior to treatment
of the target lesion with PV-10. Both lesions were then resected within
7-14 days of target lesion injection and compared to pre-treatment
biopsies. Peripheral blood was also collected pre-treatment, at the time
of resection and at day 28. The researchers note “treatment with IL
PV-10 led to pCR (pathologic complete response) in the post-treatment
biopsies of both PV-10 injected and uninjected study lesions in 4 of the
8 patients, and all 8 exhibited at least partial regression of the
injected lesion.” The abstract continues, “six of the 8 patients had
metastatic disease refractory to previous ipilimumab, anti-PD-1 and/or
vemurafenib therapy.” Based on T cells isolated from the peripheral
blood of the patients, the authors conclude that, “IL PV-10 treatment
can lead to systemic anti-melanoma immunity and pCR in injected and
uninjected lesions including treatment-refractory tumors.”
Craig Dees, PhD, CEO of Provectus said, “Taken together, these posters
indicate that, with minimal intervention, PV-10 can rapidly eliminate
refractory cutaneous melanoma lesions. IL PV-10 is also associated with
an increase in important circulating immune cells specific to the
injected lesion, potentially explaining the high rate of bystander
lesion regression seen in our clinical trials of PV-10 in locally
advanced melanoma patients.
Dees continued, "The duration of response and the bystander response
reported in the phase 2 trial was beyond the scope of simple tumor
ablation. Last year Moffitt published data from mice showing increased
anti-tumor T cell responses, and this year at ASCO they have bridged
that nonclinical finding to the same phenomenon in man. It is
unprecedented for a small molecule ablative agent to have this kind of
immune system activity detectable in peripheral blood of patients. The
1-2 punch from PV-10 (rapidly reducing tumor burden and producing immune
system stimulation) is presumably the underlying driver of these durable
complete responses in patients with cutaneous melanoma."
Provectus submitted an application in March 2014 to the FDA for
breakthrough therapy designation for PV-10 based on the results from its
phase 2 clinical study related to metastatic melanoma and is researching
efficacy of PV-10 for other indications, including liver and breast
cancers.
About Moffitt Cancer Center
Located in Tampa, Moffitt is one of only 41 National
Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Centers, a
distinction that recognizes Moffitt’s excellence in research, its
contributions to clinical trials, prevention and cancer control. Moffitt
is the No. 1 cancer hospital in Florida and has been listed in U.S. News
& World Report as one of “America’s Best Hospitals” for cancer since
1999. With more than 4,200 employees, Moffitt has an economic impact on
the state of nearly $2 billion. For more information, visit MOFFITT.org,
and follow the Moffitt momentum on Facebook,
Twitter
and YouTube.
About St. Luke's University Health Network
St. Luke's University Health Network is a nationally recognized,
regional, integrated network of non-profit hospitals, physicians and
other health-related organizations providing care in Lehigh,
Northampton, Carbon, Schuylkill, Bucks, Montgomery, Berks and Monroe
counties in Pennsylvania, and in Warren County, New Jersey. St. Luke's
provides cancer services throughout its network, providing care to
approximately 2,400 patients each year. St. Luke's has three
comprehensive outpatient cancer centers in Allentown, Bethlehem and
Easton (Anderson Campus), and also provides cancer services in
Quakertown, Coaldale and Warren County, NJ.
St.
Luke's Cancer Center is staffed by a team of fellowship-trained
cancer experts specializing in surgical oncology, medical oncology,
radiation oncology, gynecologic oncology, thoracic surgery, urologic
surgery and neurosurgical oncology. The Center emphasizes patient
satisfaction and treats all types of cancer, including: abdominal, bones
and joints, brain and spine, breast, colon and rectum, cancer of the
digestive system, gynecologic, head and neck, liver, lung/thoracic,
lymphoma/leukemia, melanoma, prostate, thyroid/endocrine system and
urinary. The Center offers advanced programs for melanoma, lung, breast,
brain and spine, prostate, gynecological and gastrointestinal cancers.
About Provectus Biopharmaceuticals, Inc.
Provectus Biopharmaceuticals specializes in developing oncology and
dermatology therapies. Its novel oncology drug PV-10, (a formulation of
the small molecule ablative agent rose bengal disodium) is designed to
selectively target and destroy cancer cells without harming surrounding
healthy tissue, significantly reducing potential for systemic side
effects. Its oncology focus is on melanoma, breast cancer and cancers of
the liver. The Company has received orphan drug designations from the
FDA for its melanoma and hepatocellular carcinoma indications. Its
dermatological drug PH-10 also targets abnormal or diseased cells, with
the current focus on psoriasis and atopic dermatitis. Provectus has
recently completed Phase 2 trials of PV-10 as a therapy for metastatic
melanoma, and of PH-10 as a topical treatment for atopic dermatitis and
psoriasis. Information about these and the Company's other clinical
trials can be found at the NIH registry, www.clinicaltrials.gov.
For additional information about Provectus please visit the Company's
website at www.pvct.com
or contact Porter, LeVay & Rose, Inc.
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS: The forward-looking statements contained
herein are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause
actual results to differ materially from those reflected in the
forward-looking statements. Readers are cautioned not to place undue
reliance on these forward-looking statements, which reflect management's
analysis only as of the date hereof. The company undertakes no
obligation to publicly revise these forward-looking statements to
reflect events or circumstances that arise after the date thereof.

Contacts:
Provectus Biopharmaceuticals, Inc.
Peter R. Culpepper, 866-594-5999
#30
CFO, COO
or
Porter, LeVay & Rose, Inc.
Investor
Relations
Marlon Nurse, 212-564-4700
DM, SVP
or
Media
Relations
Bill Gordon, 212-724-6312
Source: Provectus Biopharmaceuticals, Inc.
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