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Posted On: 04/07/2018 2:42:15 AM
Post# of 15624
On the other board a part of the patent application was discussed that certainly makes it sound like a variety of formulation of the cream may actually been tried with people with psoriasis. In that they also specify the base components that comprise the cream, and I believe in Israel all of them are legal for use, such experimentation may have been completely legal for arriving at the final formulation which would become the markerted cream once it was proven in trials.
I cannot say this is a fact, but the language in the patent certainly sounds like that is the case. The trials essentially are to confirm what they already know from a small number of applications.
It was clear the cream doesn't fully cure psoriasis, but as I understand it, the drugs available for it don't really cure it completely either, and the side effects are potentially quite detrimental. The drugs are also very costly as I understand it.
As I gather our cream would work, the psoriasis might nearly disappear after treatment, but it would eventually flare up again, and our cream would once again bring it back under control. Not a cure, but a way to make the disease tolerable.
Gary
I cannot say this is a fact, but the language in the patent certainly sounds like that is the case. The trials essentially are to confirm what they already know from a small number of applications.
It was clear the cream doesn't fully cure psoriasis, but as I understand it, the drugs available for it don't really cure it completely either, and the side effects are potentially quite detrimental. The drugs are also very costly as I understand it.
As I gather our cream would work, the psoriasis might nearly disappear after treatment, but it would eventually flare up again, and our cream would once again bring it back under control. Not a cure, but a way to make the disease tolerable.
Gary
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