Press Releases
PROGRESS ON TAGATOSE ACHIEVING 'GRAS' REPORTED
TO BIOSPHERICS
Contact: Mark Hopkinson 561/ 750-9800 x14
Email: mhopkinson@TransMediagroup.com
Investor Relations: Richard Levin 301/ 419-3900
Email: rlevin@biospherics.com
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
BELTSVILLE, MD., May 19, 2000 -- Biospherics Incorporated
(NASDAQ/BINC) reported today it has learned from its licensee
for tagatose, Arla Foods, that significant progress
has been made in determining the safety of the low calorie
sweetener.
Biospherics officials said Arla had informed them that, at
a meeting on May 15, the Expert Panel determining whether
tagatose is Generally Recognized As Safe (GRAS) for
use in foods and beverages, was close to resolving the issue
and that specific data from a Biospherics study might help
speed the process.
Biospherics CEO, Dr. Gilbert Levin said that he welcomed
the opportunity to provide data from a one-year study of the
sweetener which the Company undertook at the University of
Maryland. "We obtained excellent results in the clinical trial
conducted on human patients at the University of Maryland's
School of Medicine which might allow the Expert Panel to reach
a favorable conclusion," he said.
According to Dr. Levin large doses of tagatose were
taken orally by the patients every day for a year with no
untoward effects on safety. "We were so impressed with these
results that we had recently asked Arla Foods to present them
to the Panel," he said.
The clinical trial of tagatose, at the University
of Maryland, was partly funded by the State of Maryland which
awarded a grant through its Maryland Industrial Partnerships
Program (MIPS).
GRAS status would permit commercialization of the Biospherics'
full-bulk, low-calorie sweetener for use in foods and beverages
in the US. MD Foods, which licensed these applications of
Biospherics' patented technology, was recently merged with
the Swedish firm, Arla, to form Arla Foods. Arla Foods officials
continue to express confidence that tagatose will qualify
as GRAS.
Biospherics Inc. is a biotechnology research company founded
by Dr. Gilbert Levin who also performed research as part of
NASA's mission to Mars in 1976 where Biospherics technology
helped test soil samples. As a related project, Biospherics
began research on non-fattening sweeteners and, in the 1990's
discovered that tagatose, a natural sugar found in
certain berries and dairy products, tastes like table sugar
and is low in calories. The Company then invented a "green"
process to make the sweetener economically using whey as the
raw material.
Certain statements contained herein are "forward looking"
statements as defined in the Private Securities Litigation
Reform Act of 1995. Because such statements include risks
and uncertainties, actual results may differ from those expressed
or implied. Factors that could cause actual results to differ
materially from those expressed or implied include, but are
not limited to, those discussed in filings by the Company
with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the
filing on Form 8-K made on March 3, 1999.
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