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Lexaria Hits Important Anti-Viral Milestone with In Vitro Test of DehydraTECH(TM)

New York, New York--(Newsfile Corp. - June 17, 2021) - PCG Digital -- Lexaria Bioscience Corp. (NASDAQ: LEXX) hit a major milestone this week with their

articleLexaria Bioscience Corp.June 17, 20214/company/lexaria-bioscience-corp/news/lexaria-hits-important-anti-viral-milestone-with-in-vitro-test-of-dehydratechtm
Lexaria Hits Important Anti-Viral Milestone with In Vitro Test of DehydraTECH(TM)

About this update from Lexaria Bioscience Corp.

[{"type":"text","content":"New York, New York--(Newsfile Corp. - June 17, 2021) - PCG Digital -- Lexaria Bioscience Corp. (NASDAQ: LEXX) hit a major milestone this week with their patented DehydraTECHTM technology. An IC50 in vitro study was completed with COVID-19 SARS-CoV-2 antivirals Remdesivir and Ebastine and concluded that their formulation and processing methodology \"did not negate the known efficacy of those compounds.\"\n\"This test is conducted as a pass/fail,\" said Chris Bunka, CEO of Lexaria Bioscience. \"We needed to know if DehydraTECHTM interferes in any way with the effects these drugs have on the virus. It doesn't give us any direct score on \"how well\" it works or does not, just a yes-no. The next step is to move on to in vivo efficacy testing in animals and then eventually humans.\"\nThat's good news on two fronts for Lexaria. The first and most obvious is that DehydraTECHTM works with these important antivirals. The second is that it opens the door to an antiviral market projected to be worth USD$44 billion by 2026. The company is not limiting its scope in this area to only COVID-19 drugs. Several antivirals will be tested in the same manner.\nRemdesivir, which is sold under the brand name Veklury, is a broad-spectrum antiviral that was originally developed to treat hepatitis C. It was approved and authorized for emergency use by the FDA as a therapeutic treatment for COVID-19 in 2020. Lexaria would like to emphasize that the use of DehydraTECHTM with Remdesivir does not create a \"cure\" for COVID-19.\nEbastine is an antihistamine that is administered orally. It's used for treatment of allergic rhinitis and chronic idiopathic urticaria. In some countries it is also used for relief from mosquito bites or atopic dermatitis. It's been in medical use since 1990 and is available in 10mg to 20mg tablets, fast-dissolving tablets, and as a pediatric syrup.\nRemdesivir and Ebastine both face bioavailability challenges when administered orally, thus limiting their commercial potential. Lexaria hopes to change this with its technology.\nThis week, Lexaria announced it had measured circulating drug levels of DehydraTECH-enabled Remdesivir and Ebastine twice or even three times higher than concentration-matched controls without DehydraTECH. Mr. Bunka described the outcome as \"the best results Lexaria has ever generated demonstrating our techno...

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