Filed by Cell Therapeutics, Inc.
Pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act of 1933
And deemed filed pursuant to Rule 14a-12
Of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934
Subject Company: Cell Therapeutics, Inc.
Commission File No: 001-12465
The following is the entire presentation given by Cell Therapeutics, Inc. at its annual meeting of stockholders, held on June 20, 2003.
Welcome
Shareholders & Guests
June 20, 2003
1
Annual Shareholders Meeting
James A. Bianco
President and CEO
(GRAPHIC)
Were fighting cancer
2
Business Meeting Agenda
| Approve minutes |
| Elect Directors |
| Approve 2003 Equity Incentive Plan |
| Approve an amendment to Employee Stock Purchase Plan |
| Ratify selection of E&Y as independent auditors |
3
Business Meeting
| Call meeting to order |
| Introduction of officers, directors, accountants, inspector of elections |
| Record Date: May 7, 2003 |
| Confirmation of quorum established |
4
Business Meeting
| Approval of minutes |
5
Business Meeting
| Election of class III Directors |
- | Mary Mundinger |
- | Jack Singer |
- | Marty Sutter |
| Election of class I Director |
- | John Fluke |
6
Business Meeting
| Approve 2003 Equity Incentive Plan |
7
Business Meeting
| Approve amendment to the Companys 1996 Employee Stock Purchase Plan to increase the number of shares by 150,000 to a total of approximately 635,000 shares |
8
Business Meeting
| Ratify selection of Ernst & Young as independent auditors |
| Open the floor to motions |
9
Business Meeting
| Voting |
| Results of voting |
| Conclusion of the business items |
10
Management Presentation
[GRAHIC]
11
Agenda
| Oncology Portfolio Strategy J. Bianco |
| Market Dynamics |
- | Hematology Market |
- | Solid Tumor Market |
| CTI-Novuspharma merger |
| Commercial Development E. Kenney |
| Research and Clinical Development J. Singer |
| Closing Remarks J. Bianco |
12
Forward Looking Statement
This presentation contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are based on managements current expectations and beliefs and are subject to a number of factors and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements contained in this presentation include statements about future financial and operating results, the proposed CTI/Novuspharma merger, and risk and uncertainties that could affect CTIs product and products under development. These statements are not guarantees of future performance, involve certain risks, uncertainties and assumptions that are difficult to predict, and are based upon assumptions as to future events that may not prove accurate. Therefore, actual outcomes and results may differ materially from what is expressed herein. For example, if either of the companies do not receive required stockholder approvals or fail to satisfy other conditions to closing, the transaction will not be consummated. In any forward-looking statement in which CTI expresses an expectation or belief as to future results, such expectation or belief is expressed in good faith and believed to have a reasonable basis, but there can be no assurance that the statement or expectation or belief will result or be achieved or accomplished. The following factors, among others, could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements: risks associated with preclinical, clinical and sales and marketing developments in the biopharmaceutical industry in general and in particular including, without limitation, the potential failure to meet TRISENOX® revenue goals, the potential failure of XYOTAX to prove safe and effective for treatment of non-small cell lung and ovarian cancers, the potential failure of TRISENOX® to continue to be safe and effective for cancer patients, determinations by regulatory, patent and administrative governmental authorities, competitive factors, technological developments, costs of developing, producing and selling TRISENOX® and CTIs products under development in addition to the risk that the CTI and Novuspharma businesses will not be integrated successfully; costs related to the proposed merger, failure of the CTI or Novuspharma stockholders to approve the proposed merger; and other economic, business, competitive, and/or regulatory factors affecting CTIs and Novuspharmas businesses generally, including those set forth in CTIs filings with the SEC, including its Annual Report on Form 10-K for its most recent fiscal year and its most recent Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, especially in the Factors Affecting Our Operating Results and Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations sections, and its Current Reports on Form 8-K. CTI is under no obligation to (and expressly disclaims any such obligation to) update or alter its forward-looking statements whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.
13
Where You Can Find
Additional Information
Cell Therapeutics, Inc. (CTI) will file a proxy statement/prospectus and other documents concerning the proposed merger transaction with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Investors and security holders are urged to read the proxy statement/prospectus when it becomes available and other relevant documents filed with the SEC because they will contain important information. Security holders may obtain a free copy of the proxy statement/prospects (when it is available) and other documents filed by CTI with the SEC at the SECs website at http://www.sec.gov. The proxy statement/prospectus and these other documents may also be obtained for free from CTI, Investor Relations: 501 Elliott Avenue West, Suite 400 Seattle, WA 98119, www.cticseattle.com.
CTI and Novuspharma S.p.A. and their respective directors and executive officers and other members of their management and their employees may be deemed to be participants in the solicitation of proxies from the shareholders of CTI and Novuspharma with respect to the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement. Information about the directors and officers of CTI is included in CTIs Proxy Statement for its 2003 Annual Meeting of Stockholders filed with the SEC on May 14, 2003.
This document is available free of charge at the SECs website at http://www.sec.gov and from CTI.
14
Making Cancer More Treatable
Providing less toxic, more effective
therapies to treat and cure cancer while
permitting patients and their families to
maintain their dignity and quality of life
15
New Paradigm in Treating Cancer
Improving treatment outcomes four strategic directions
| Improving tolerability of existing chemotherapy agents |
| Combining therapies to work more effectively without increased side effects |
| Developing tumor targeted therapies exploiting human genome |
| Treating cancer as a chronic disease without impacting quality of life |
16
Oncology Strategy
| Improve the safety and efficacy of existing agents which provide the cornerstone for standard of care |
- | Taxanes (>$2B) XYOTAX |
- | Camptothecins (>$1B) CT-2106 |
- | Anthracyclines (>$500M) Pixantrone |
| Develop new agents with unique mechanisms of tumor cell killing without more side effects |
- | TRISENOX® |
- | LPAAT-ß inhibitors |
| Develop significant sales and marketing presence in cancer market segments where leverage is possible |
- | Blood-related cancer market |
| Consider co-marketing relationship where size matters |
- | Solid tumor indications |
17
Commercial Synergies
Key Products |
Hematology |
Solid Tumors | ||
TRISENOX® |
APL, CML, MDS, Multiple myeloma |
|||
Pixantrone |
Aggressive NHL Indolent NHL |
Breast cancer Prostate cancer | ||
XYOTAX |
NSC lung cancer Ovarian cancer | |||
CT-2106 |
Colorectal cancer Small cell lung cancer |
18
Hematology
Commercial opportunity
2002 Incidence |
2002 Prevalence | |||
Total Hematologic |
94,850 | 423,564 | ||
TRISENOX® |
||||
APL |
1,050 | 2,535 | ||
Myelodysplastic |
||||
Syndromes |
15,200 | 35,562 | ||
Multiple Myeloma |
14,600 | 49,542 | ||
Pixantrone |
||||
AML |
10,600 | 18,980 | ||
Indolent NHL |
24,030 | 142,625 | ||
Aggressive NHL |
29,370 | 174,320 |
19
Selected Companies
Focused on Hematology Market
Company |
Key Products |
Market Cap | |||
Genentech |
Rituxan® | $ | 38 B | ||
Berlex* |
Campath®, Fludara®, Leukine® | $ | 10 B | ||
Idec |
Zevalin®, Rituxan® | $ | 6.3 B | ||
Millennium |
Velcade | $ | 4.7 B | ||
Celgene |
Thalomid®, Revimid | $ | 2.7 B | ||
CTI |
TRISENOX®, Pixantrone | $ | 518 M1 |
* | Schering AG |
1 | Pro forma market cap |
20
Hematology Market Dynamics
| Few big pharma competitors in the space |
| High incidence diseases with few good treatment options |
| Concentrated target market |
- | ~4,500 physicians allows maximum sales and marketing leverage |
| Many agents used in combination therapy |
21
Oncology
Commercial opportunity
2002 Incidence |
2002 Prevalence | |||
Total Oncologic |
516,144 | 3,132,334 | ||
XYOTAX |
||||
Advanced NSC lung |
137,600 | 162,352 | ||
Ovarian |
25,400 | 145,831 | ||
CT-2106 |
||||
Small cell lung |
34,380 | 57,983 | ||
Colorectal |
147,500 | 930,083 | ||
Pixantrone |
||||
Breast |
212,600 | 1,836,085 |
22
Companies Focused on
Oncology-Chemotherapy Market
Company |
Key Products |
Market Cap | |||
Pfizer |
Camptosar® | $ | 285 B | ||
GlaxoSmithKline |
Hycamtin®, Navelbine® | $ | 126 B | ||
Novartis |
Femara, Aredia®, Gleevec, | $ | 117 B | ||
Sandostatin®, Zometa | |||||
Astra-Zeneca |
Arimidex®, Casodex®, Faslodex®, | $ | 78 B | ||
IRESSA®, Nolvadex®, Zoladex® | |||||
Eli Lilly |
Gemzar® | $ | 78 B | ||
Bristol Myers |
Taxol®, Ifex®, Paraplatin® | $ | 56 B | ||
Aventis |
Taxotere®, Campto®, Genasense | $ | 42 B | ||
CTI |
XTOTAX, Pixantrone | $ | 518 M1 |
1 | Pro forma market cap |
23
Oncology Market Dynamics
| Big pharma significant sales and marketing presence provides barrier to new marketer entry |
| Novel breakthrough products rapidly adopted and can generate >$1B in annual sales |
| Suggests partnership with multi-nationals for blockbuster product may maximize commercial potential |
24
Commercial Strategy
| Utilize TRISENOX® to establish a commercial organization |
| Expand TRISENOX® indications to capture market share in blood related cancers (MDS, multiple myeloma) making commercial business profitable |
| Acquire additional products with utility in blood related cancers to expand market share and revenue growth |
| Grow commercial organization to provide demand generating capacity for launch of XYOTAX |
25
CTI-Novuspharma Merger
Immediate realizable synergies
| Pixantrone: commercially attractive phase III product |
- | May qualify for FDA fast track |
- | Potential NDA 2005, market launch 2006 |
- | US sales could reach $150M+ |
| Financially attractive |
- | $120M in cash |
- | $18-$20M in cost savings |
| Significant operating synergies |
- | Critical mass in global oncology drug development |
- | Increases commercial capabilities and sales potential in EU for expanded TRISENOX® label |
26
Strong Financial Position
| Pro-forma end Q1 cash position $306 million |
- | $111M cash Q1-2003 |
- | $120M Novuspharma cash Q1-2003 |
- | $75M convertible offering* |
- | Exchange offer 12/02 retired $60M convertible debt |
| Merger offers potential for cost synergies |
- | $18M to $20M savings in 2004 |
| TRISENOX® U.S. business becoming profitable |
- | Allows ability to grow TRISENOX® sales in EU with new indication (MDS) |
| Creates critical mass in cancer drug development and commercialization |
* | Gross proceeds |
27
Commercial Operations
Edward F. Kenney
Executive Vice President
Chief Operating Officer
[GRAPHIC]
Were fighting cancer
28
Trisenox
(arsenic trioxide) injection
Indicated for the induction or remission and
consolidation for patients with relapsed or
refractory acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL)
[GRAPHIC]
29
TRISENOX®
| Product approved US and EU |
| 100% CAGR forecasted through 2003 |
| $150+ million peak US sales potential |
| Gaining US market share |
| EU penetration limited to initial label (APL) |
| Potential for MDS filing in 2004 allows for re-evaluation of EU commercial potential and strategy |
30
TRISENOX
US Patient Mix
1Q02 |
1Q03 | |
APL 15% |
APL 10% | |
Myeloma 43% |
Myeloma 43% | |
MDS 29% |
MDS 41% | |
Other 13% |
Other 6% |
[Graphic]
31
TRISENOX®
Sales revenues & forecasts
$Millions |
||||||
$6.0M |
$11.7M | $24M | $43.0M | |||
2001 |
2002 | 2003(E) | 2004(E) |
Source for 2004 estimate: CIBC World Markets
32
Solid Tumors
Commercial opportunity
Taxanes
- | Taxol® (paclitaxel), Taxotere® (docetaxel) most widely used cancer drugs |
| Worldwide sales exceed $2 billion |
| Projected number of patients treated monthly |
- | Paclitaxel 54,700 |
- | Docetaxel 26,400 |
| 70% of taxane use is in 4 tumor types |
33
Worldwide Taxane Sales
2002
Paclitaxel $857M Sales 60% in ovarian and lung cancers
Docetaxel $1,192M WW Sales 33% in ovarian and lung cancers
34
US Taxane Sales
2001
¨ Paclitaxel ¨Docetaxel
NSC Lung Cancer 36,526 pts/yr. (Docetaxel) $153M 50,134 pts/yr (Paclitaxel) $280M
Ovarian Cancer 18,002 pts/yr (Paclitaxel) $195M
Breast Cancer 17,837 pts/yr (Docetaxel) $244M 15,923 pts/yr (Paclitaxel) $173M
35
XYOTAX (polyglutamate paclitaxel)
A safer, potentially more effective taxane
36
XYOTAX
Target product profile
XYOTAX |
Paclitaxel |
Docetaxel | ||||
Premedications |
No | Yes | Yes | |||
Infusion time |
10 mins | 3 hrs | 1 hr | |||
Special infusion kits |
No | Yes | Yes | |||
Hair loss |
No | Yes | Yes | |||
Neuropathy |
Infrequent | Frequent | Infrequent | |||
Tolerability |
Excellent | Fair | Fair | |||
Efficacy |
Superior | | |
37
Value Drivers
Drivers of market share
| Strength of product attributes |
- | Efficacy |
- | Safety |
- | Convenience |
| Reimbursement/third-party provider support |
| Price/dosing schedule for XYOTAX |
38
Commercial Growth
[GRAPHIC]
TRISENOX® APL label, > 40 trials, 2003
XYOTAX Phase III trials, 2003
TRISENOX® Potential MDS label, 2004
XYOTAX
Potential NDA, 2004
Pixantrone
Phase III trials, 2004
TRISENOX® Potential myeloma label, 2005
XYOTAX
Potential NSCLC label, 2005
Pixantrone
Potential NDA, 2005
Pixantrone Potential aggressive NHL label, 2006
39
Research & Clinical Development
Jack W. Singer
Executive Vice President
Research Chair
[GRAPHIC]
Were fighting cancer
40
Oncology Pipeline
Preclinical | Phase I | Phase II | Phase III | NDA | Marketed | |||||||
TRISENOX® |
Approved for relapsed or refractory acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) Multiple myeloma, myelodysplasia, myelogenous leukemia and other cancers | |||||||||||
XYOTAX |
Non-small cell lung and ovarian cancers | |||||||||||
Pixantrone |
Non-Hodgkins lymphoma | |||||||||||
CT-2106 |
Advanced solid tumors | |||||||||||
LPAAT-B |
||||||||||||
inhibitors |
41
TRISENOX®
| Initial label indication: relapsed/refractory APL |
| Compelling efficacy in other hematologic cancers (multiple myeloma, MDS) |
| Robust safety data base of over 2,300 patients |
- | Manageable side effect profile |
| >40 market expansion investigator sponsored trials targeting larger disease targets |
42
TRISENOX®
Impressive efficacy data in MDS
MDS (145 patients, 81 evaluable)
| 32% objective responses including high risk patients |
| Decreases or eliminates RBC and platelet transfusion dependence |
- | 80% of responding pts became transfusion independent lasting up to 2 yrs |
| Well tolerated, no dose reductions required |
| Exploring label expansion in MDS in US and EU in 2004 |
Reported at conferences in May, 2003
43
TRISENOX®
Impressive efficacy data in multiple myeloma
Multiple myeloma (86 patients, 78 evaluable)
| High response rates in combination with dexamethasone, vitamin C, and melphalan |
- | ~40% objective responses (³ PR) |
- | ~70% disease control |
- | Marked improvement in kidney function |
| Well tolerated; manageable side effects |
| Active in patients who failed Velcade, Thalomid® |
| 2 large combination studies in progress |
| Potential for label expansion |
Reported at conferences in May, 2003
44
XYOTAX
Safer, potentially more effective taxane
| Links paclitaxel to a digestible polymer |
| Accumulates preferentially in tumor tissue |
| Allows entry into cancer cells unlike standard paclitaxel |
| 10-minute infusion into peripheral vein; no premedications required |
| Robust clinical development program |
- | FDA approved phase III protocols for NSCLC |
- | Several phase I/II clinical trials ongoing |
45
XYOTAX
Phase I/II clinical trials
| 7 phase I trials |
- | Single agent |
- | Combined with platinates |
- | Every other week dosing |
- | Combined with radiation |
| 4 phase II trials |
- | High risk NSC lung cancer |
- | Chemotherapy resistant colorectal cancer |
- | Chemotherapy resistant ovarian cancer |
- | Relapsed/refractory breast cancer |
46
XYOTAX
Registration strategy & timeline
| XYOTAX pivotal clinical trials to demonstrate |
- | Superior survival compared to marketed taxanes in treatment of NSC lung cancer |
- | Ease of use |
- | Lower overall treatment costs |
- | Lower incidence of severe side effects compared to approved agents |
| Submit NSC lung cancer NDA in 2H04 |
| Follow-on data in front-line ovarian cancer to supplement market launch |
47
Pixantrone
(from Novuspharma merger)
| New DNA intercalator with improved efficacy and safety |
| Now in phase III for NHL |
[GRAPHIC] |
48
DNA Intercalators
| Established efficacy |
- | Cornerstone of chemotherapy for breast cancer, leukemias, and lymphomas |
- | Standard treatment in blood-born tumors curative |
- | Breast cancer highly effective as adjuvant and frontline therapy |
- | Only therapy for advanced forms of multiple sclerosis |
| However problems with cardiotoxicity |
- | Irreversible damage to heart muscle |
- | Maximum cumulative dose in patients lifetime |
- | Prevents use as repeat therapy |
49
DNA Intercalators
with improved efficacy and safety
| Novuspharmas approach |
- | Alter chemical groups responsible for free-radical production and cardiac toxicity |
[GRAPHIC]
| Target markets |
- | Unmet clinical need in second-line therapy (NHL) |
- | Replace current DNA intercalators as safer treatment in first-line |
50
Pixantrone
Doxorubicin |
Mitoxantrone |
Pixantrone | ||||
Efficacy in |
+++ | ++ | ++++ | |||
hematology |
||||||
Efficacy in |
++/+++ | ++ | ++ | |||
solid tumors |
||||||
Safety |
+ | ++ | ++++ | |||
(esp. cardiac) |
| Superior anti-tumor activity in P388 and L1210 murine leukemias vs. Dx and Mitox |
| Curative in YC-8 murine lymphoma |
| Wide therapeutic windoweffective from 1/3 of MTD |
| Synergism with Cisplatin and Rituxan |
51
Effect of pixantrone and mitoxantrone (MITOX) on survival in the YC-8 lymphoma model (iv/iv + 1,5,9)
[Graphic]
52
Pixantrone Experimental cardiotoxicity
[Graphic]
53
Pixantrone
Target product profile
| Superior safety |
- | Cardiac toxicity profile superior to existing agents |
- | Not toxic to tissues, eliminates need for central line |
- | Less severe nausea and vomiting |
| Impressive efficacy |
- | Long lasting complete remissions in heavily treated NHL patients |
- | As single agent or in combination with chemotherapy |
| Potential to be used where other anthracyclines cannot |
- | Breast cancer in combination with Herceptin® |
- | Breast cancer salvage after prior anthracycline therapy |
- | Late-stage lymphomas |
54
Pixantrone
| Extensive clinical trial experience |
- | >170 patients |
- | 7 phase I, II trials |
| Initial market entry into area of high unmet need |
- | 3rd-line aggressive NHL |
- | Currently no approved therapies |
- | Market size ~15,000 patients |
| Potential label expansion |
- | Relapsed indolent NHL + Rituxan® (phase III) |
- | 2nd-line combination in high grade NHL (phase II) |
- | Salvage breast cancer ± Herceptin® (planned) |
55
Pixantrone
Impressive single agent activity (NHL)
| High response rates in relapsed/resistant aggressive NHL |
- | ORR= >30% (7CRs/5PRs + 5uPRs) |
- | Durable responses: TTP >8 months for responders |
| Well tolerated |
- | Grade 4 neutropenia 13/33 (40%) |
- | Grade 4 anemia/thrombocytopenia 0-1/33 (<3%) |
| 28/33 (85%) had maximum prior anthracycline exposure |
| 14/33 (42%) received >1,000-1500mg/m2 Pixantrone |
| Encouraging low incidence of cardiac events despite prior anthracycline exposure |
56
Pixantrone
Combination trials
| Highly active in combination regimens for relapsed/refractory NHL replacing doxorubicin |
- | CHOP n=17 |
| 13 patients evaluable; 6CRs/1PR |
- | ESHAP n=21 |
| 19 patients evaluable; 7CRs/4PRs |
| Highly active in relapsed/refractory indolent NHL |
- | FND-R n=9 |
- | 6 patients evaluable; 5CRs/1PR |
57
Preliminary Market Study
% of physicians who would prescribe Pixantrone
by line of therapy
First Line |
Second Line |
Third Line |
|||||||
Aggressive |
47 | % | 100 | % | 100 | % | |||
Indolent |
27 | % | 67 | % | 67 | % |
- | Almost half of the physicians would try Pixantrone in place of doxorubicin in first line therapy for aggressive patients mostly for patients with cardiovascular risk factors |
58
CT-2106
Polyglutamate camptothecin
| Camptothecins (irinotecan, topotecan) approved for colorectal cancer, small cell lung cancer, and relapsed ovarian cancer |
| Highly active class of drugs but limited by toxicity |
| CT-2106 links 20S camptothecin to PG polymer |
| Excellent activity and safety in animal studies |
| Preliminary phase I data |
- | 13 patients treated at doses from 12 to 75 mg/m2 |
- | MTD not reached |
- | Early evidence of activity |
- | Presentation on preliminary results targeted for 4Q03 |
| Plan to initiate phase I/II combination study in colorectal and/or small cell cancer in 1H04 |
59
LPAAT-ß
Novel cancer target
| LPAAT-ß cloned and identified as a novel cancer target by CTI scientists |
| Potential broad utility against many types of common cancers |
| Preclinical studies of drug-like inhibitors selectively destroy cancerous cells |
| Plenary presentations at three major cancer meetings in 2002 -2003 |
| Potential clinical candidate in 2004 |
60
Closing Remarks
James A. Bianco
President and CEO
Were fighting cancer
[GRAPHIC]
61
Last 12 Months in Review
Objective
| Acquire late stage or commercial product |
| Reduce burn rate and secure adequate capital to grow commercial operations and see XYOTAX to NDA |
| Advance discussions toward potential XYOTAX partner |
| Initiate pivotal XYOTAX phase III trials |
| TRISENOX®profitable operating business |
| Highlight clinical data at key scientific meetings |
Status
| Novuspharma merger |
- | Pixantrone in phase III |
- | $18-$20m in annual operating synergies |
- | $120M balance sheet |
| $75M notes offering |
| Partnership discussions for XYOTAX ongoing |
| STELLAR-2, -3, -4 trials FDA approved and enrolling |
| Sales targeted to double to $24M this year |
| ASH, AACR, ASCO, MM, MDS |
62
Key Objectives
Next 12-18 Months
| Gynecologic Oncology Group to initiate phase III study of XYOTAX in ovarian cancer |
| Complete enrollment of pivotal trials in non-small cell lung cancer |
| Successful merger with Novuspharma to maximize cost synergies and efficiencies |
| Initiate pivotal trial of Pixantrone in aggressive relapsed NHL |
63
Key Objectives
Next 12-18 Months
| Explore TRISENOX® label expansion in MDS in 2004 |
| Grow TRISENOX® sales >$40M |
| Submit NDA for XYOTAX |
| Advance LPAAT inhibitors in development |
| Secure global commercial partner for XYOTAX |
64
Stock Price Performance
[Graphic]
65
Community Involvement
International Myeloma Foundation Education-Treatment-Research
The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society Fighting Blood-Related Cancers
MMRF Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation
Gildas Club Worldwide
The Friends of José Carreras International Leukemia Foundation
Lance Armstrong Foundation
Ronald McDonald House - The House that love built. Seattle
Seattle Center Foundation
MS National Multiple Sclerosis Society
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
United Way of America
66
[Graphic] cti
Making cancer more treatable
(c) 2003 Cell Therapeutics Inc
67