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Ray Blanco’s : “What This CEO Says on Nov.7, 2015 Could Revolutionize Modern American Medicine…”

Solving the latest teaser pitch from Agora Financial's FDA Trader

By Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe, October 27, 2015

I know I’ve said this before, and sometimes it’s a lie: I’m going to try to keep this one brief.

Agora Financial’s FDA Trader service has a new pitch out — which normally might not get that much attention, since everyone is suddenly terrified of biotech stocks after a brutal month or two — but the promise is not just that a drug will get approved and make you rich… the promise is that this company will “revolutionize modern medicine.”

So what are they talking about? Well, the short answer is, “a cure for Alzheimer’s Disease.”

Which, depending on how long you’ve been investing in or reading about healthcare stocks, will either make you want to reach for your wallet or hide under your desk. Alzheimer’s Disease is by far the largest and most lucrative market that is underserved by pharmaceuticals — and the constant search for new treatments for this awful, high volume disease that has been a money pit for pharmaceutical companies. The disease is challenging and still very poorly understood, the only treatments available now are disappointing and help just some of the patients with some of their symptoms, and any new drug faces extraordinary challenges and very expensive clinical trials.

But, of course, if anyone does come up with a cure or a preventive for Alzheimer’s Disease that’s safe and approvable, they could make a whole boatload of money. So we see pitches about tiny biotech companies that have a cure for Alzheimer’s every now and then.

That’s what this one is today — the ad is for FDA Trader from Agora, edited by Ray Blanco (who has been the default editor of most of their technology-focused newsletters for many years — this newsletter used to be helmed by Paul Mampilly, but he moved a couple buildings down to work at Stansberry)… so what are we told about this secret little company?

Well, here’s why Gumshoe readers are asking about this one:

“On Saturday, November 7, a CEO you’ve likely never heard of will step up to the podium….

“Standing at that podium, he’ll be in front of the most respected names in his industry.

“When he starts speaking, he could change forever everything we think we know about one of the most frightening diseases in world history.

“What he has to say could revolutionize modern medicine for reasons I’ll show you here today.

“The market frenzy his comments create could also make you incredibly wealthy.

“That’s because, when the markets open on Monday, November 9, the stock of the company this CEO leads could explode rapidly higher.

“If this CEO’s presentation on November 7 goes as well as I expect, starting Monday, November 9, you could take part in an epic share price explosion.

“I’m talking about the chance at gains of as much as 2,150% or more as this tiny company rockets from under $9.00 to $200 and beyond.”

So, 2,150% gains — nice, right? And he implies that, while it “may take time,” the huge gains will start right away on November 9. Assuming, of course, that he’s right about what this CEO is going to say.

Some more clues? Well, let me give you another wee taste of the hype first:

“If You Buy Just One Stock For the Next Year, This is the One

“This CEO’s company might control what we come to view as the breakthrough of the decade.

“Over 5 million Americans, in fact, suffer as I write from the disease this company aims to treat.

“Actually, ‘treat’ isn’t the right word.

“If this company’s trial results continue to progress as well as early reports indicate, this company’s breakthrough could actually ‘reverse’ the disease.

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“What we’re dealing with here… for the first time in modern medical history… is the potential ability to take a disease with no cure and no good treatment…

“… and stop it in its tracks. That’s the big picture.

“This advance, it goes without saying, could be unprecedented. No one has ever seen anything like this before.”

OK, OK — enough drooling! I know, I know, it’s supposed to make us filthy rich, and make us feel good about owning shares of the company that finally eradicates the scourge of Alzheimer’s… so what is it?

Final clues for you — don’t worry, I won’t make you sift through the whole ad (you can see it here if you want the water torture version), but we do need to confirm that this company is the one I think it is. The clues:

“For the first time in history, we may have an AD drug on our hands that stops and reverses the symptoms of the disease.

“Here’s the important point:

“Phase 2A testing of this drug took a small group of patients with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer’s symptoms and put them on the drug for 36 days.

“83% of patients had a positive response, and the cognitive skills / memory testing of those patients increased 4x over the current ‘standard of care’ drug.

“Keep in mind, this preliminary Phase 2A data didn’t have optimized dosing. The treatment also wasn’t administered long-term.

“For a small Phase 2A study, this was a profound and fascinating result:

“83% of those who took the drug saw a benefit.

“And improvement in memory function was a robust 4x increase over the current standard drug.”

So the basic spiel is, this company is releasing more detail from their Phase 2A trial for some kind of Alzheimer’s Disease drug, and Blanco thinks it will show continued success and the stock will rocket forward as they progress into Phase 3 and move toward determining whether the drug is really safe and effective on a large scale, making us all gazillions of dollars. But, of course, you’ll “miss out” if you don’t subscribe to his newsletter ($1,600, please) before the CEO gives his presentation in a couple weeks.

And the stock? Thinkolator sez this is one we’ve seen similarly teased many, many times: Anavex Life Sciences (AVXLD on the OTCQX as of today, though it will begin trading on the Nasdaq tomorrow at AVXL), standard-bearer of the Alzheimer’s hopefuls in the junior biotech space for nearly a decade now.

Yes, Anavex will be reporting some results on November 7 at a conference — though it won’t be the CEO, it will be the principal investigator from Australia reporting the results. This will be an updated version of the results they announced a few months ago, since the first part of the two-part study has now been fully enrolled and they have more data. This is largely a dose-finding study, though they’re also hoping for some positive efficacy results and, of course, a lack of surprise safety concerns.

I am not a biotech investor, and not an expert on the disease or the drug, but my impression is that it’s a measure of how desperate we are for any kind of hope in Alzheimer’s Disease that this trial is generating so much attention — the results in July, as I saw it, were that 10 out of 12 patients showed memory improvement, without any kind of placebo arm. It’s hard enough to run a good clinical trial without a double blind placebo, but doing one in areas of memory and cognition, where you’re counting on the interpretations of patients and other human beings to judge whether there’s improvement, strikes me as not very powerful. That’s not necessarily a criticism of the company, they’re still trying to determine what dosing and regiment has the best chance of working and they will certainly be required to have huge double-blind trials before they get approval on this drug — to say nothing of part B of this current trial, which will not be complete for at least a year… it’s just a reminder that, in Alzheimer’s especially, it’s important not to get your hopes up too quickly.

The drug is Anavex 2-73, which we’ve certainly mentioned a few times — it has been the highest profile “hopeful” drug for Alzheimer’s among the junior biotechs for a long time. And it’s history tells you something about how hard it is to develop drugs for this disease — they initially thought they’d be filing for an IND and starting their Phase 1 trials for Anavex 2-73 back in 2008. Ray Blanco’s former colleague pitched this one back in December of last year, too, and he and several other newsletters have pitched it as the “end of the Grey Plague” or the “next blockbuster” for almost as long as Stock Gumshoe has existed (we started publishing in 2007, FYI).

Anavex does have other drugs in development, too — though they jump around some as hope and potential shifts, and they don’t appear to currently be spending money on any of the other drugs right now, it’s all about Anavex 2-73 and Anavex Plus (which is just Anavex 2-73 plus Aricept, the current “standard of care” drug for Alzheimer’s symptoms).

And, as you might expect, the company does not have the capital to run a multi-year Phase 3 trial (assuming they eventually get that far) with hundreds of patients — but it has become more of a mainstream stock this year as they reported good Phase 1 results, started Phase 2, and applied for uplisting to Nasdaq, with much higher trading volume and a rising price… so they should at least be able to raise money on better terms. They also have an agreement in place with their big institutional investor, Lincoln Park Capital, that could bring in another $50 million if I’m reading the terms right — presumably Lincoln park also gets some kind of sweetener in the form of warrants or pricing or something, I haven’t checked.

The presentation on the trial will be at a conference on clinical trials in Alzheimer’s Disease in Barcelona in early November, Anavex’s press release about it is here. Judging from past Alzheimer’s trials I’ve seen over the years, my guess would be that they’ll require another Phase 2 trial or maybe 2b/3a trial if you want to start parsing that, which would probably not start until next year sometime, and they’d require a long Phase 3 trial of a couple years, at least. And, of course, given the past performance of Alzheimer’s Disease drugs and the continued lack of real detailed understanding about the disease and its causes, I’d assume we should probably continue to give them a low number in the “probability of approval” department.

That’s said, I reiterate, as someone who is not not not an expert on this drug, this disease, or even this company — but the symptom-treating drugs that have been developed, have, in the rare cases where they’ve made it through to approval, taken a loooong time. The reward is high — Aricept, despite the fact that it really isn’t a “cure” for Alzheimer’s and doesn’t reverse the progress of the disease, still had peak sales well into the billions before it went off patent a few years ago — so we should expect the risk to be high, too.

For me, the biggest risk is that we’re talking about a tiny company riding high on sentiment and still probably a year or more from entering the most expensive phase of drug development (it’s up dramatically on the year, though that followed a four-year decline from the days when the IND was first being talked about for Anavex 2-73 — AVXL is up a couple hundred percent this year, and is down about 90% since the 2008 highs). I may be a bit too cynical about this one, since I’ve written about the “promise” of a real disease-modifying drug for Alzheimer’s Disease at least a half dozen times over the last seven years, and it’s always been about Anavex, and they’re still just in a Phase 2 trial with 32 patients. But that said, the stock has clearly performed well this year because of the new attention, the progress into early stage trials and lack of bad news and, probably more than anything else, the public attention and massive size of the end market.

If past Alzheimer’s drug hopes are any indication, there are four scenarios I could guess at: A, it could collapse on the next news release or sometime in the current trial because of bad news; B, it could consume a couple hundred million dollars running a big phase 3 trial and fail to show good results because of poor safety or lacking efficacy, and see the share price drop on bad news and capital raisings over several years; C, it could attract a suitor if they get “phase 3 ready” and get bought out or partnered to cut costs, driving the shares up further; or D, it could, maybe sometime early in the 2020s after another 5 years of clinical trials, eventually get approved and be the cure everyone’s looking for. My guess is “B” … but, as I noted above, I may be too cynical on this one and it has certainly gotten some folks excited so far this year.

So that’s what we’ve got for you today — whaddya think? Willing to bet on Anavex this time around? Let us know with a comment below.

P.S. I should note that our favorite biotech columnist, Dr. KSS, has been unimpressed by Anavex in the past — he last commented on it here, I think.

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Ben
Member
Ben
October 27, 2015 12:19 pm

A year ago this month, you recommended EverBank’s BRICS CD, a three-year commitment. After a year, the CD is ‘limping’ along, having earned a grand total of $3.12. Any comment?
Ben

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Mike
Mike
October 27, 2015 1:19 pm

You are wrong on this one.

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Mike
Mike
October 27, 2015 2:08 pm

Sorry I meant you are wrong about Anavex… Do some more DD.

alanh
October 27, 2015 2:20 pm
Reply to  Mike

Mike: Why are you being so coy. If you know better, spill your ‘guess’

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David Guin
Member
David Guin
October 28, 2015 5:16 am
Reply to  Mike

Tell us what you know then Mike.

Bill
Guest
Bill
November 4, 2015 1:51 pm
Reply to  David Guin

I hate it when someone takes so much time to explain there position on a stock, and then a bozo comes along with a few words… “You are wrong”. Come on Mike – if you’re going to make that kind of statement, then explain your position! Put some time and a little effort to match the efforts of Travis or KEEP YOUR MOUTH SHUT! Thank you very much…

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Chuck
Guest
Chuck
October 27, 2015 2:02 pm
Reply to  Mike

I’d have to agree.

Option A is all but ruled out at this point (for the 11/7 data at least).

Option B is unlikely because assuming 11/7 data confirms the 7/22 data you already have something with more efficacy than standard of care and one of the biggest unmet needs in medicine. Bigger trials will only confirm this and safety has been clean thus far.

Option C, most likely what will happen.

Option D, would be even better than option C I just don’t know if I’m that patient!

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Seabastan
Guest
Seabastan
November 4, 2015 8:24 pm

Don’t forget to mention that Big Pharma continuously targeted plaque,
while Anavex is targeting the symptom that produces the plaque. Catch up
with what science concurred with in that it is time for Pharmas to try and target
something else, which is what Anavex is doing. Sigma-1 receptors instead of the plaque
which big pharma repeatedly did and failed.

Richard
Member
Richard
October 27, 2015 1:55 pm

One can delay the onset of dementia by learning, a new language, playing high level chess, learning to lay a new musical instrument, doing crosswords puzzles, doing sodoku, not smoking, not drinking excessively. Donepezil is now off patent and should cost about $30 per month.

The nun study indicates that on autopsies nun’s may have severe Alzheimer’s disease but not on cognitives tests done shortly before death.

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Drano
Guest
Drano
October 27, 2015 2:34 pm
Reply to  Richard

That is incorrect. Although exercise does seem to help people with Alzheimer’s delay some of the degeneration, there are plenty of people who remained mentally active, exercised, ate right — and still got Alzheimer’s. Those studies claiming that learning new things delays onset have been discredited many times. Claiming that lifestyle can prevent or delay Alzheimer’s gets dangerously close to a “blame the victim” mentality. Having known several people who have gotten this horrible disease because of their genetics but had very healthy lifestyles, I find it offensive to see these unscientific untruths repeated — and, oddly enough, they are promoted by the very companies selling products that are supposed to help cognition in this bogus fashion.
Some lifestyle issues do predispose one to Alzheimer’s. So do genetics. We can’t even diagnose Alzheimer’s well, we don’t know what causes it, nor how to treat it. AVXL’s drug seems to have helped some patients improve, and the fact that they rushed to be included in this conference certainly seems to indicate that they have some good results.
There is currently NO good drug to treat this disease, perhaps because all of them focus on clearing out amyloid plaques. Some of the experimental drugs made the patients worse. A theory is that the plaques are like band-aids that the brain creates to try to fix the damage from Alzheimer’s, and the plaques are not themselves the cause but a symptom. AVXL’s drug is pursuing a completely different pathway — trying to get “upstream” so that the plaques do not form.

Richard
Member
Richard
October 28, 2015 10:20 am
Reply to  Drano

The nun studies indicate the nuns on Autopsy studies have Alzheimer’s, but on cognitive testing there are no indications of dementia. “Those studies claiming that learning new things delays onset have been discredited many times” is not correct.
Richard

chibana
chibana
October 27, 2015 2:36 pm

Team,
$AVXL is my one regret stock for 2015. Purchased shares for $.50 sold at $.88. Trading today at $9.60 (split adjusted). $200 is probably a stretch but maybe $20 isn’t near term with good results. Track record hasn’t been good with many attempts to treat Alzheimer’s Disease but that of course doesn’t mean this treatment won’t work. Perhaps the news is already priced in and if the results don’t impress share price will fall like a stone. Time will tell as always. TIB.
V/R
Tom

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stevemack70
October 27, 2015 2:53 pm
Reply to  chibana

I did a similar thing. B .63 S .94. Never looked back until this article caused me to. Not the first time I wasn’t patient enough and probably won’t be the last.

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oldbob
Irregular
oldbob
October 27, 2015 3:40 pm

I’m surprised that the CEO in their pitch is that short. Most people would step up to a lectern and maybe stand on a podium.

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arch1
October 28, 2015 6:19 am
Reply to  oldbob

oldbob You just hush now….yur not sposed to point out such things in those overpriced promises. I lust after 2150% profit but I can PROMISE 9723% profit if you just invest one penny in something that doubles every day for 90 days or possibly less. I just have no idea what could do that or does anyone,,, in what causes alzheimers,,,except you generally have to live to old age to get it. BTW you could probably get “some” improvement in 90% of the patients you gave a glass of water and a little attention,,,listening to them. IMHO fa

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jonee
jonee
October 28, 2015 6:26 am
Reply to  arch1

AVXL- What arch said above 🙂

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sheila225
sheila225
October 27, 2015 3:54 pm

Just a thought-
Based on the study protocol, and the FDA Guidance issued in 2013 – its possible that they may have some early (Part B) data that demonstrates an improvement (even a slight one) in the cognitive function of patients with “early stage disease”. This could trigger (based on the Guidance) the FDA to permit an accelerated approval path. See the link below
http://www.fda.gov/downloads/Drugs/GuidanceComplianceRegulatoryInformation/Guidances/UCM338287.pdf

The inclusion criteria for the study lists “Diagnosis of Probable AD” and suggests that this approach is part of their clinical strategy.

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scottsmith
Guest
scottsmith
November 2, 2015 11:12 pm

I get it. You aren’t an expert on the science or clinical trials. You were gracious enough to remind your readers of that shortcoming several times. I won’t even bother to ask how you can bother to make conclusions when you eagerly admit to knowing nothing. Well you do seem to onow that Anavex has been around a while and the current trial enrolls less than 50 people. I guess it’s a stupid question to ask given your admitted ignorance, but are you familiar at all with adaptive trial design?

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Debbie
Member
November 8, 2015 10:11 pm

I so enjoy Stock Gumshoe, and find it useful. This article has been helpful. I have the Agora Financial reserve membership thus, the FDA Trader. I didn’t have the funds to buy two weeks ago when Ray recommended it, and kicked myself when it went to around (if my memory serves me correctly) $14.00. This past Friday it went back down to below the original buy price, somewhere in the $8.00 range (which leaves me with the confusing decision whether to get in now). Regardless, I’ve experienced this a few times, and I am wondering if, when it comes to these biotech stocks, it’s not better to ‘take the money and run’ when a stock shoots higher’, and not wait for the long run unless I have money to tie up for a while. Of course, every time I’ve done that, the stock has gone lots higher…but at least I made some money…One lesson I’ve learned is not to ‘be a gambler’, keep my positions smaller that I wish until I actually make some money! I think, instead of finding a stock that makes me a million dollars, I should find a million stocks that make me a dollar.

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Myron Martin
Irregular
October 27, 2015 4:22 pm

The question that doesn’t seem to get asked is, what has changed in our lifestyles, diets,
environment etc.over the past 100 years or so that could be a “trigger” for the development of such horrible diseases as Alzheimers. I question whether the answer lies in some magical drug that will cure the disease as opposed, as most drugs do, merely controlling symptoms to some degree. Far too much money is spent looking for “cures” that can be treated at a profit as opposed to searching for CAUSES that can be prevented. I remember decades ago reading about researchers concluding that a major factor in Alzheimer’s being aluminum poisoning with fingers pointing at underarm deodorants containing aluminum and of course aluminum cooking utensils with numerous studies showing that certain acidic foods such as rhubarb cooked in aluminum pots would result in aluminum migrating into the food and this showed up in studies of Alzheimer’s patients brains, but that would be too simple an answer, avoiding certain poisons in out modern environment.
Reminds me of the current controversy over prepared meats (bacon, sausages, wieners etc.) preserved with nitrates or nitrite being cancer causing. Immediately all kinds of industry affected producers are crying foul and trying to sway public opinion against the new research, and that seems to be the dilemma. Whenever “dollars” get involved threatening someones profits there is always a backlash to protect the status quo.
How long did the tobacco companies fight the evidence that their product was deadly and how many millions of people are still hooked on the filthy habit? Human nature is our biggest enemy, most people either don’t take the time to educate themselves or plain just don’t want to know and continue unhealthy lifestyles. For the record, I knew more than 50 years ago that prepared meats (particularly preserved with nitrates) were unhealthy and gave them up. Our food should be eaten fresh, without preservatives, additives, anything artificial such as added colours and flavours etc.

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BJI
Member
BJI
October 27, 2015 5:08 pm
Reply to  Myron Martin

At what age does Alzheimers typically begin showing symptoms?
What was life expectancy 100 years ago? What is it now?
Isn’t “Old Age” the primary cause of dementia including Alz.?

Patricia
October 27, 2015 5:52 pm
Reply to  BJI

BJI, has anyone bothered doing a comprehensive study comparing apples to apples: the RATE of dementia in those who reached advanced age in the past, to those who reach it now? Of course people are living longer – far fewer work accidents, fewer war deaths, less starvation and infectious disease, and the ability of doctors to do basic plumbing like bypass surgery.

My own recall of people I’ve known is that far fewer of those who reached their 80s thirty or forty years ago developed dementias of any sort. Myron is correct – our poisoned environment and food supply is taking its toll. One proof is that the elderly among the few remote tribes who still live primitively, living off nature, tend to stay “sharp as a tack” mentally up until their last days, just like our own ancestors did.

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dcohn
Member
October 28, 2015 11:56 am
Reply to  Patricia

Perlmutter claims it is based on diet.http://www.perlmutterfoundation.org/

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invest405
invest405
October 27, 2015 7:54 pm
Reply to  BJI

I have 2 cases of near and dear of “early onset” in my inner circle. Both were 52 at the time of diagnosis and 5 years later – they are both very ill. I think we are finding that “early onset” is more normal these days than was thought before and that the numbers are increasing. A bit like autism.

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Deep
Member
Deep
November 1, 2015 8:05 pm
Reply to  BJI

When Dr. Altzeimer first reported his findings he was referring to “pre-senile” dementia in patients. Over time we have begun to shun the word “senile” and today all dementias seem to be called Altzeimer’s Dementia. Just some historical background.

Hupitat
Hupitat
October 28, 2015 12:54 am
Reply to  Myron Martin

We are what we eat.
Why cows have a ‘madcow’ MD? Because they were eating (feed) something they should not be eating.
Getting fungi (the fungi we can’t even eat) in our brain eating something we should not. Every one of us genetic make up is pretty unique and reacts differently every external factor. As a light colored skin (born in Northern Europe) I got melanoma just in 5 years after moving to Australia. I wore 30+ sunblock every day. Regardless precautions in my behalf, my skin was under relentless sun rays. Aboriginals have no problems with a sun. Maybe future generations become tolerant all the food additives and plagues like AD, cancers etc disappear. Treating the symptom is biggest scam of all, maybe even bigger than “Fractional Reserve Banking”. But nobody knows! Now, I had to take my pills, maybe extra Valium to make my pharma company little bit more profitable.

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Gary J.
Guest
Gary J.
October 31, 2015 12:11 am
Reply to  Myron Martin

I haven’t found any underarm deodorants that don’t have aluminum in them. Do you know of any? I think I have even seen it in some vitamins but don’t ask why.

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Joe B
Guest
Joe B
November 1, 2015 11:13 am
Reply to  Gary J.

Tom’s of Maine (www.tomsofmaine.com) is one deodorant that has no aluminum unless it has recently been changed. Don’t think so. I’ve been suspicious of aluminum cookware as well.

stan
stan
November 1, 2015 12:03 pm
Reply to  Joe B

Yes, I get Tom’s at Walmart. Aluminum-free deodorant and fluoride-free toothpaste.
Might work, besides I like the products generally.

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Sten L.
Guest
Sten L.
November 1, 2015 3:12 pm
Reply to  stan

I am also vary of the aluminum and have used a $1.00
box of baking soda. Just stick 2 moist fingers
in the box after shower and wipe in arm pit.
Seems to last all day under most conditions

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Lorraine S.
Lorraine S.
November 1, 2015 4:39 pm
Reply to  Gary J.

Gary,
Try Primal Life Organics and Real Purity deodorants. They are excellent and contain only natural and organic ingredients. Both can be ordered online. Real Purity deodorant is also carried at some Whole Food Stores.

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Ponce
Ponce
October 27, 2015 5:11 pm

I read about a doctor whose very bright husband developed Alzheimer’s. After consultation with experts but no improvement, she did her own research and found virgin coconut oil as excellent food for the brain. The husband took at least 2 table spoons a day and in 37 days his symptoms was gone. The husband was able to go back working and made virgin coconut oil as his daily regimen. Of course no Pharma would be interested in this being a natural substance not patentable.

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dcohn
Member
October 28, 2015 11:59 am
Reply to  Ponce

The mct oil in coconut oil is supposedly what helps. See Perlmutter.

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stan
stan
November 1, 2015 12:07 pm
Reply to  Ponce

I believe this woman/doctor was and maybe is a professor at Yale U. I think I read this about 5 yrs ago

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kristen mower
kristen mower
November 2, 2015 4:13 am
Reply to  stan

Mary Newport is the author of that book. Very good…I think her husband went down hill later but it certainly gave him longer time.

SoGiAm
October 27, 2015 5:31 pm

Different Brain Regions are Infected with Fungi in Alzheimer’s Disease
http://www.nature.com/articles/srep15015 Best2ALL!-Ben

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Patricia
October 27, 2015 6:18 pm
Reply to  SoGiAm

That was a great find Ben which I saw impressed even Dr. KSS. Cause or effect? I was once told about a personal remark by a surgeon to his patient that he found extreme parasite infestations in most of the cancer patients he operated on – if true, is that cause or effect? Why not both? I’ve seen some remarkable recoveries from serious illnesses in people who used herbs to kill their parasites, and in people who tried ketogenic diets (a diet which, in theory, would starve and kill fungi). If a body is being overwhelmed by a combination of four or five things, in my experience just fixing one of them can be enough to reverse the course of their health from succumbing to recovery.

I doubt that any drug, or any natural substance, would have the power to reverse NFTs though – Alzheimers is likely one more of those degenerative conditions which they will eventually discover/realize/admit must be prevented or reversed in early stages, before so much structural damage is done.

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John
John
October 27, 2015 6:33 pm

I was telling people on here months ago to check out Anavex.. I have made some good money on this and if they get to phase $15 I still own shares and benefitted by their 1-4 stock split.. They are on the right track…

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Gui_
Gui_
October 27, 2015 8:26 pm
Reply to  John

Good job John, were you one of the ones in the discussion on KSS’ threads back in July?

Unfortunately I left way to much money on the table bailing before the split, once again way to keep the faith.

Here’s a repost of mine some might still find useful.

RE: AVXL DD post on Investorshub by jbem777 one od 4 “picks” still current first posted on 3/25/2015

“jbem777 Wednesday, 03/25/15 10:46:44 AM
Re: None

Post # of 7037

AVXL DD- All you need to know

Anavex (AVXL)

http://www.anavex.com/

Here is some brief DD.

Fully reporting OTC.

Market Cap: Only $11 million and they are targeting indications with multi-billion potential

Outstanding Shares: 56,441,000

Insider Ownership: 24.33% (Yahoo)

Institutional Ownership: 54.39% (Figures from the Recent S1)

Auriga Global 4.99%
Auriga Investors-Montserrat 4.99%
Hudson Bay Master Fund 4.99%
DAFNA LifeScience LP 4.99%
DAFNA LifeScience Market Neutral 2.53%
DAFNA LifeScience Select L.P. 4.99%
Joann Mostovoy 4.99%
Sabby Healthcare 4.99%
Sabby Volatility Warrant Master Fund 4.99%
Sphera Global Healthcare Master Fund 9.99%
HFR HE Sphera Global Healthcare Master Trust 1.95%

Insider and institutional ownership give this stock a very small float which causes it to move quickly when she pops.

Catalysts: They are target Alzheimer’s disease and other neurological disorders. Pre-clinical results have been astounding and there is huge promise for their molecules. They are currently running a P2A study, using a combination of Anavex. Data is expected in September 2015 or Q3. Also, they have utilized an “Adaptive Trial” design which will allow them to progress into a P3 study by the end of the year.

CEO stated that in Q2 they will be filing an IND application to the FDA for an Orphan Indication. They also intend to provide an enrollment update in Q2 as well.

The CEO’s presentation at the Roth conference can be found here:

http://wsw.com/webcast/roth29/register.aspx?conf=roth29&page=avxl&url=http://wsw.com/webcast/roth29/avxl/index.aspx

Here is a summary of their pipeline. Of particular note is that their drug targets the multiple etiologies associated with Alzheimer’s disease including the Tau receptor, which the Mayo clinic just came out yesterday and said was the key driving force in Alzheimer’s.

Here is the article: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2015-03-thousands-brains-reveals-tau-driver.html

Our Pipeline

Our pipeline includes one clinical drug candidate and several compounds in different stages of pre-clinical study.
Our proprietary SIGMACEPTOR™ Discovery Platform produced small molecule drug candidates with unique modes of action, based on our understanding of sigma receptors. Sigma receptors may be targets for therapeutics to combat many human diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease. When bound by the appropriate ligands, sigma receptors influence the functioning of multiple biochemical signals that are involved in the pathogenesis (origin or development) of disease.

Compounds that have been subjects of our research include the following:

ANAVEX 2-73

ANAVEX 2-73 may offer a disease-modifying approach in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) by using ligands that activate sigma-1 receptors.
In AD animal models, ANAVEX 2-73 has shown pharmacological, histological and behavioral evidence as a potential neuroprotective, anti-amnesic, anti-convulsive and anti-depressive therapeutic agent, due to its potent affinity to sigma-1 receptors and moderate affinities to M1-4 type muscarinic receptors. In addition, ANAVEX 2-73 has shown a potential dual mechanism which may impact both amyloid and tau pathology. In a transgenic AD animal model Tg2576 ANAVEX 2-73 induced a statistically significant neuroprotective effect against the development of oxidative stress in the mouse brain, as well as significantly increased the expression of functional and synaptic plasticity markers that is apparently amyloid-beta independent. It also statistically alleviated the learning and memory deficits developed over time in the animals, regardless of sex, both in terms of spatial working memory and long-term spatial reference memory.

Based on the results of pre-clinical testing, we initiated and completed a Phase 1 single ascending dose (SAD) clinical trial of ANAVEX 2-73 in 2011. In this Phase 1 SAD trial, the maximum tolerated single dose was defined per protocol as 55-60 mg. This dose is above the equivalent dose shown to have positive effects in mouse models of AD. There were no significant changes in laboratory or electrocardiogram (ECG) parameters. ANAVEX 2-73 was well tolerated below the 55-60 mg dose with only mild adverse events in some subjects. Observed adverse events at doses above the maximum tolerated single dose included headache and dizziness, which were moderate in severity and reversible. These side effects are often seen with drugs that target central nervous system (CNS) conditions, including AD.

The ANAVEX 2-73 Phase 1 SAD trial was conducted as a randomized, placebo-controlled study. Healthy male volunteers between the ages of 18 and 55 received single, ascending oral doses over the course of the trial. Study endpoints included safety and tolerability together with pharmacokinetic parameters.

Pharmacokinetics includes the absorption and distribution of a drug, the rate at which a drug enters the blood and the duration of its effect, as well as chemical changes of the substance in the body. This study was conducted in Germany in collaboration with ABX-CRO, a clinical research organization that has conducted several Alzheimer’s disease studies, and the Technical University of Dresden.

ANAVEX PLUS

ANAVEX PLUS, a combination of ANAVEX 2-73 with donepezil (Aricept®) is a potential novel combination drug for Alzheimer’s disease. Aricept® (donepezil) is now generic. ANAVEX 2-73 showed in combination with donepezil an unexpected and clear synergic effect of memory improvement by up to 80% in animal models. A patent application was filed in the US for the combination of donepezil and ANAVEX 2-73 and if granted would give patent protection at least until 2033.

In a humanized calibrated cortical network computer model the unexpected pre-clinical synergy between ANAVEX 2-73 and donepezil was confirmed and ANAVEX PLUS showed an anticipated ADAS-Cog response of 7 points at 12 weeks and 5.5 points at 26 weeks, which represents more than 2x the ADAS-Cog of donepezil alone.

ANAVEX 3-71

ANAVEX 3-71, previously named AF710B is a preclinical drug candidate with a novel mechanism of action via sigma-1 receptor activation and M1 muscarinic allosteric modulation, which has shown to enhance neuroprotection and cognition in Alzheimer’s disease. ANAVEX 3-71 is a CNS-penetrable mono-therapy that bridges treatment of both cognitive impairments with disease modifications. It is highly effective in very small doses against the major Alzheimer’s hallmarks in transgenic (3xTg-AD) mice, including cognitive deficits, amyloid and tau pathologies, and also has beneficial effects on inflammation and mitochondrial dysfunctions. ANAVEX 3-71 indicates extensive therapeutic advantages in Alzheimer’s and other protein-aggregation-related diseases given its ability to enhance neuroprotection and cognition via sigma-1 receptor activation and M1 muscarinic allosteric modulation.

ANAVEX 1-41

ANAVEX 1-41 is a sigma-1 agonist. Pre-clinical tests revealed significant neuroprotective benefits (i.e., protects nerve cells from degeneration or death) through the modulation of endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondrial and oxidative stress, which damages and destroys cells and is believed by some scientists to be a primary cause of AD. In addition, in animal models, ANAVEX 1-41 prevented the expression of caspase-3, an enzyme that plays a key role in apoptosis (programmed cell death) and loss of cells in the hippocampus, the part of the brain that regulates learning, emotion and memory. These activities involve both muscarinic and sigma-1 receptor systems through a novel mechanism of action.

They also have a very strong leadership team:

Dr. Missling, President and CEO of Anavex, has over 20 years of healthcare industry experience within large pharmaceutical companies, the biotech industry and investment banking. Prior to joining Anavex, he served as the Chief Financial Officer of Curis and ImmunoGen.

Dr. Zografidis, the Vice President Clinical Operations of Anavex, has over 25 years of experience in the pharmaceutical and healthcare industry, including 12 years at Wyeth (now Pfizer) in clinical project management and prior to joining Anavex most recently served as clinical and pharmaceutical consultant.

Bernd Metzner, PhD, a director of Anavex, is currently Chief Financial Officer of the Doehler Group, a global producer and provider of technology-based natural ingredients for the food and beverage industry with sales activities in more than 130 countries. Previously, he was Chief Administration Officer and member of the Board of Management of Bayer Schering Pharma AG, the pharmaceutical division of $100+ billion market cap company Bayer AG.

Solid pipeline and good leadership. They are also very good at PR, which is a benefit to shareholders in that they are actively trying to spread the word about their pipeline and potential.

Here is a link to their corporate presentation:

http://www.anavex.com/files/2015-01-06_AVXL_Corporate_Presentation.pdf

Notice that on slide 24 the Market Caps of comparable companies. The LOWEST comparable it 10x’s larger than AVXL’s and they are at the same stage of development.

Now here is the kicker, the recently completed and offering, underwritten by Maxim with 66 million warrants. 33 million of those warrants are exercisable at $.30 and the other 33 million are exercisable at $.42. Also, Maxim has a price target of $7 for AVXL. Do your own DD and you see the importance of this.”

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john
john
October 28, 2015 2:30 pm
Reply to  Gui_

AVXL is at $9.70 will be at $15 when it gets to phase 3 I have beenin and out of this stock since it was .17 and I kept telling everyone about it.. now it’s paying off much more..

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SoGiAm
October 27, 2015 8:07 pm

AVXL-The terrible trio Agora, Lincoln Park and Maxim Kolbert has pump-and-Dump claws into Anavex per Adam Feuerstein Best2U-Ben

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john
john
October 28, 2015 2:31 pm
Reply to  SoGiAm

THey are late comers to this stock.. It’s been on the radar for two years…

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SoGiAm
October 28, 2015 6:59 am

NOURISH AD is a clinical research study evaluating the safety and effectiveness of an investigational drug for mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease. Study volunteers will be monitored closely by their study doctor. http://www.ipsresearch.com/trials/accera-nourish-ad-study/ I believe this is the trial that is using palm and coconut oil extracts Best2ALL!-Ben

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Gui_
Gui_
October 28, 2015 9:11 am
Reply to  SoGiAm

Uplisting brings more institutional exposure

as well as more shorts wearing big boy pants,

good luck to all here that are in Anavex.

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Vitt
Guest
Vitt
October 29, 2015 4:34 pm
Reply to  Gui_

Thank you for posting all of that DD!!! obviously Travis could not take the time to go through it himself before he wrote this lame article so he fully understands what is going on with AVXL!!

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arch1
October 29, 2015 5:15 pm

Travis I thank you for doing that,,,exactly and honestly as tou state you do. No wonder the shysters and pumper/dumpers don’t like this jewel of a resource site you have built.
You know who you are and any comments are my unpaid /no connection to Gumshoe
opinion. fa

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jbinsc
Member
November 3, 2015 3:58 pm

scottsmith and Vitt are rude and obviously don’t know much themselves. It makes me wonder why they read Stock Gumshoe!
They should appreciate it when someone admits they are not experts on a given subject
As Travis does !!!
John…jbinsc

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joe kavanagh
Guest
November 4, 2015 6:45 pm

Travis, You mentioned you weren’t sure about warrants in the LPC financing. There are no warrants. On the 9th of November Anavex should surpass Axon in market cap.

My 2 cents

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Sun Sa
Member
Sun Sa
September 30, 2018 12:00 pm
Reply to  Vitt

scottsmith and Vitt.

You are the typical whining a-holes who rather than contribute constructively to a forum where you get a free dissection of stocks being pumped, you criticize the author for not being an expert in the medical field.

Travis freely admits to not being an expert, shares his analysis openly of high pressure ads in various fields, and requests readers to add their knowledge to a discussion.

You have alternatives, use them. Eg stop reading Travis’ posts, pay heavily for the advertised subscriptions, go get a PHD in Alzheimers etc

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SoGiAm
October 28, 2015 8:58 am
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sheila225
sheila225
October 28, 2015 12:11 pm

More confirmation of my earlier thoughts –

Anavex Life Sciences Corp. (“Anavex” or the “Company”) (OTCQX:AVXL), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing drug candidates to treat Alzheimer’s disease, other central nervous system (CNS) diseases, pain, and various types of cancer, today announced the presentation of full PART A data and preliminary PART B data from the ongoing Phase 2a clinical trial of ANAVEX 2-73 at the upcoming Clinical Trials on Alzheimer’s Disease (CTAD) conference in Barcelona, Spain from November 5-7, 2015. The late-breaking oral session will be presented by the trial’s Principal Investigator, Stephen Macfarlane, FRANZCP, Director and Associate Professor, Aged Psychiatry at Caulfield Hospital in Melbourne, Australia.

Sheila

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Lane Simonian
Guest
Lane Simonian
October 28, 2015 3:36 pm

Anavex’s drug has potential in that it is actually treating a pathway that is responsible for the progression of Alzheimer’s disease rather than supposed markers of the disease (amyloid oligomers, amyloid plaques, and tau tangles). The drug interferes with the chain between NMDA receptor activation and the formation of peroxynitrite (what the nun study showed is that you can have plenty amyloid and tau tangles in the brain and not have Alzheimer’s disease; the reason for this is that as long as peroxynitrite is being scavenged by antioxidants in the brain a person does not develop the disease).

Peroxynitrite is an oxidant that limits the flow of blood in the brain, prevents the regeneration of neurons in the hippocampus, limits the synthesis and release of neurotransmitters required for short-term memory, sleep, mood, social recognition, and alertness, and leads to the death of neurons (it is peroxynitrite that leads to the activation of caspase-3 in Alzheimer’s disease). Inhibiting peroxynitrite formation is critical for slowing down the progression of Alzheimer’s disease.

It is not clear at this point how thoroughly Anavex inhibits the formation of peroxynitrite nor is it clear if it does anything to reverse the damage that has already been done. At the very least, it should slow down the progression of Alzheimer’s disease, which is better than any current drug on the market, but not as good as some natural products that are peroxynitrite scavengers.

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1479-8301.2009.00299.x/full

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19298205

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22780999

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3659550/

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Fatboy228
October 28, 2015 9:52 pm

The Motley fool has been pumping David Gardner’s tech extravaganza based on NFC (near field communication) . Have you heard the 40 minute come on that only gets you to another site were you can give the Fools lots of money? The spiel is based on the magic wrist band worn in Disneyland.
I have concluded it’s NXP or a small Swiss company AMS. Would you agree and how would you invest in a company listed on the Swiss exchange.
Love the site
Chuck

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SoGiAm
October 28, 2015 10:38 pm
Reply to  Fatboy228

NXP or NXPI you may trade most markets Globally using Interactive Brokers:
https://www.interactivebrokers.com/en/home.php Best2U-Ben

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fatboy2281
October 28, 2015 10:03 pm

Not sure if this is the forum but Motley fool is pumping NFC (near field communication) tech company that will revolutionize the next smart watches based on the magic wristbands worn at Disneyland . Two companies I think are NXP and AMS which trades on the Swiss exchange.
What does the community think and how do you trade on the Swiss exchange?

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armin
armin
October 29, 2015 8:04 am

Anavex (AVXL): It´s so funny. As soon as anyone at any place in the WWW says anything different from “this drug will be the greatest drug of all time and will revolutionize medicine” there soon come some guys around the bush who are touting exactly this. This is the biggest stock promo and the biggest cult-like following for a stock I have ever seen since Uni-Pixel in 2012/13: http://bigcharts.marketwatch.com/kaavio.Webhost/charts/big.chart?nosettings=1&symb=unxl&uf=0&type=4&size=2&sid=5874078&style=340&freq=2&entitlementtoken=0c33378313484ba9b46b8e24ded87dd6&time=20&rand=83557276&compidx=aaaaa%3a0&ma=0&maval=9&lf=1&lf2=0&lf3=0&height=335&width=579&mocktick=1

Ultimately this will probably end in a desaster for stock holders. But the knack on that: As long as there are merely small shareholders and insiders (and no institutionals) in the stock (and that´s the case at the moment), the hype can go on for quite some time because they will interpret the November 7 results as they please, no matter what would be a realistic take on them. So it even could be possible for them to place a capital increase at a absurdly high price in the market as was the case with Uni-Pixel (UNXL).
Stock market psychology seems not to have changed much since the tulip mania a few centuries ago: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulip_mania

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SoGiAm
October 29, 2015 8:45 am
Reply to  armin

AVXL, ICPT Agree armin, same concept financial products! Best2U-Ben

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stan
Member
stan
October 29, 2015 8:57 am

alzhimers is a prion disease so is not curable

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