PROJECT SUMMARY
There is need for an artificial oxygen (O2) carrier to substitute for stored blood products, which at times are
unavailable (pre-hospital care, austere environments, resource-limited countries), undesirable (risk of immune
response), or in short supply to meet demand (mass casualty event). Moreover, transfusion of a crystalloid or
colloid solution alone will lead to dilutional deficiencies of blood components such as red blood cells (RBCs),
which are critical for delivering oxygen (O2) to the various tissues. KaloCyte's focus is to develop ErythroMer
(EM), a lyophilized, bio-inspired, artificial RBC, which will transform how patients who need a transfusion are
treated when stored RBCs or whole blood are not an option. Previous oxygen carrier products have had two
major design flaws preventing them from mimicking RBC physiology: (1) inability to appropriately release O2 to
tissues after capture in the lungs and (2) sequestration of nitric oxide (NO) resulting in vasoconstriction. EM is
designed to not only carry O2 but also surmount the barriers encountered by prior oxygen carriers (intended as
red blood cell substitutes). EM accomplishes this by emulating physiologic RBC O2 capture and delivery along
with benign interaction with the vasculature. These key bio-inspired design features differentiate EM from
previous attempts. Moreover, EM is designed for sterile lyophilization and so, is amenable to facile, rapid
reconstitution after extended dry storage under ambient conditions. EM offers a pragmatic approach to a complex
need and is designed for cost-effective production at scale. Our prototype has passed rigorous initial ex vivo and
in vivo “proof of concept” testing. KaloCyte was founded so that we may translate EM innovations into a
pragmatic therapeutic and as well as realize the commercial potential of a disruptive introduction into transfusion
medicine. Our project goals are to enable rapid, facile reconstitution and establish the optimal colloid (albumin
and freeze-dried plasma), and crystalloid (normal saline, lactated ringers, PlasmaLyte A) ratios for EM
resuspension, while not disrupting the osmolality and oncotic pressure of blood. EM intellectual property is robust
and secured by KaloCyte, which is supported by a solid research team, our CEO with a strong therapeutic
industry background and scientific advisors, with experience in hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier development,
lyophilization, transfusion medicine, hemorrhage & resuscitation, pre-clinical development and trial design. SBIR
funding will enable KaloCyte to critical pre-clinical development in EM production and initiate groundwork
required for IND authorization. Of note, our initial studies and the approach herein meet published FDA
expectations for blood substitutes. Given the significant need and market potential we have hemorrhagic shock
as the first indication for FDA approval. Following a successful trial for hemorrhagic shock, we would expand EM
into other settings and exploit the design to extend efficacies beyond that of stored blood.