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Wenyuan Shi, UCLA:
STAMP C16G2 Mouthwash May Render Tooth Decay a Thing of the Past
November 21 2011
A new mouthwash developed by a microbiologist at the UCLA School of
Dentistry is highly successful in targeting the harmful Streptococcus
mutans bacteria that is the principal cause tooth decay and cavities.
Wenyuan
Shi
In a recent clinical study, 12 subjects who rinsed just one time with
the experimental mouthwash experienced a nearly complete elimination of
the S. mutans bacteria over the entire four-day testing period. The
findings from the small-scale study are published in the current edition
of the international dental journal Caries Research.
Dental caries, commonly known as tooth decay or cavities, is one of the
most common and costly infectious diseases in the United States,
affecting more than 50 percent of children and the vast majority of
adults aged 18 and older. Americans spend more than $70 billion each
year on dental services, with the majority of that amount going toward
the treatment of dental caries.
This new mouthwash is the product of nearly a decade of research
conducted by Wenyuan Shi, chair of the oral biology section at the UCLA
School of Dentistry. Shi developed a new antimicrobial technology called
STAMP (specifically targeted anti-microbial peptides) with support from
Colgate-Palmolive and from C3-Jian Inc., a company he founded around
patent rights he developed at UCLA; the patents were exclusively
licensed by UCLA to C3-Jian. The mouthwash uses a STAMP known as C16G2.
The human body is home to millions of different bacteria, some of which
cause diseases such as dental caries but many of which are vital for
optimum health. Most common broad-spectrum antibiotics, like
conventional mouthwash, indiscriminately kill both benign and harmful
pathogenic organisms and only do so for a 12-hour time period.
The overuse of broad-spectrum antibiotics can seriously disrupt the
body's normal ecological balance, rendering humans more susceptible to
bacterial, yeast and parasitic infections.
Shi's Sm STAMP C16G2 investigational drug, tested in the clinical study,
acts as a sort of "smart bomb," eliminating only the harmful bacteria
and remaining effective for an extended period.
Based
on the success of this limited clinical trial, C3-Jian Inc. has filed a
New Investigational Drug application with the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration, which is expected to begin more extensive clinical
trials in March 2012. If the FDA ultimately approves Sm STAMP C16G2 for
general use, it will be the first such anti–dental caries drug since
fluoride was licensed nearly 60 years ago.
"With this new antimicrobial technology, we have the prospect of
actually wiping out tooth decay in our lifetime," said Shi, who noted
that this work may lay the foundation for developing additional
target-specific "smart bomb" antimicrobials to combat other diseases.
"The work conducted by Dr. Shi's laboratory will help transform the
concept of targeted antimicrobial therapy into a reality," said Dr. No-Hee
Park, dean of the UCLA School of Dentistry. "We are proud that UCLA will
become known as the birthplace of this significant treatment
innovation." |