MAYWOOD, N.J.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 5, 2005--Nymox Pharmaceutical
Corporation (NASDAQ:NYMX) announced today that its tobacco exposure testing
technology has proven to be a valuable aid for counseling expectant mothers
about the risks posed by tobacco use and exposure to themselves and their unborn
children. Under the direction of the Medical Director, Dr. Terrence McGaw, MD,
and Tamara Baumann, APN RNC, the Washoe Pregnancy Center in Reno, Nevada, has
successfully been using Nymox's NicAlert(TM) product as a teaching tool and
counseling aid in order to show expectant mothers the level of their tobacco use
and exposure.
According to Dr. McGaw, "NicAlert(TM) allows me to focus on the result of the
test as an entree into a short discussion about the patient's use of tobacco,
ability to avoid exposure to tobacco or continued success at avoiding all
tobacco products."
"The NicAlert(TM) strips are a wonderful teaching tool for our nurses," said
Tamara Baumann. "It helps them to understand the absorption of second hand smoke
as well as for the moms who smoke to understand how much cotinine is in their
body system. Once they see the result and receive counseling on the effects of
nicotine on their fetus it helps them to cut down and eventually stop smoking."
Nymox's NicAlert(TM) product provides a proven, easy-to-use, on-site means of
determining an individual's use of or exposure to tobacco products. The product
gives a visual read-out of the level of tobacco use or exposure within minutes
and requires no instruments to use. NicAlert(TM) has received U.S. FDA clearance
for medical use for determining an individual's exposure to tobacco products.
It is well-known that women who smoke during pregnancy are at high risk for
pregnancy complications and their children are at increased risk for low birth
weight, upper and lower respiratory infections and other conditions. Several
studies have shown that expectant mothers can minimize or deny their smoking
behavior, making counseling more difficult. Other studies have shown that
exposure to second hand smoke during pregnancy is associated with increased risk
of lower birth weight and preterm delivery.
NicAlert(TM) uses powerful, one-step patented technology to measure the level
of cotinine, a metabolite of nicotine, in urine. Cotinine is widely accepted and
commonly used in medical research and public health studies to determine the
extent of tobacco product use or exposure. NicAlert(TM) testing can be performed
almost anywhere, including at home, the workplace or school.
Independent studies have found the technology employed in NicAlert(TM) to be
an accurate, rapid and cost-effective means of confirming smoking status. One
study, "Validating a Dipstick Method for Detecting Recent Smoking," Cancer
Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention (2002; 11:1123-1125) examined the smoking
status of patients at a cancer clinic and found that the results obtained using
Nymox's tobacco product exposure test had an "excellent agreement" with
state-of-the-art sophisticated laboratory measurements but at a substantially
lower cost (over 90% less). Another peer-reviewed study, "The Accuracy of
Self-Reported Smoking Status Assessed by Cotinine Test Strips," Nicotine &
Tobacco Research (2002; 4:305-9) found Nymox's product to be "an inexpensive and
rapid method to routinely bio-chemically confirm smoking status at a clinical
visit." The authors described the Nymox product as a "simple, inexpensive and
rapid measure to immediately confirm smoking status in field settings."
The U.S. Surgeon General, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC), the World Health Organization (WHO) and many other public health
organizations have targeted tobacco use as the single most preventable cause of
premature death today. The CDC estimates that smoking causes over 440,000
premature deaths annually in the United States and creates an economic loss of
over $150 billion a year. Worldwide, the WHO estimates that tobacco use and
exposure currently kills 4.9 million people a year and that this death toll will
rise to 10 million a year by 2020.
In February 2005, the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control came into
effect in 57 countries. The treaty requires the adoption and implementation of
measures to reduce exposure to second hand smoke, to diagnose tobacco dependence
and to promote tobacco use cessation.
This press release contains certain "forward-looking statements" as defined
in the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 that
involve a number of risks and uncertainties. There can be no assurance that such
statements will prove to be accurate and the actual results and future events
could differ materially from management's current expectations. Such factors are
detailed from time to time in Nymox's filings with the United States Securities
and Exchange Commission and other regulatory authorities.