Neurotrope Inc. NTRP, +1.65% a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing novel therapies for neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease (AD), today announced that it has entered into a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) with the National Cancer Institute (NCI) for the research and clinical development of Bryostatin-1. Under the CRADA, Neurotrope will collaborate with the NCI’s Center for Cancer Research, Pediatric Oncology Branch (POB) to develop a Phase I clinical trial testing the safety and toxicity of Bryostatin-1 in children and young adults with CD22 + leukemia and B-cell lymphoma. In the growing era of highly effective immunotherapies targeting cell-surface antigens (e.g., CAR-T cell therapy), and the recognition that antigen modulation plays a critical role in evasion of response to immunotherapy, the ability for Bryostatin-1 to upregulate CD22 may serve a synergistic role in enhancing the response to a host of CD22 targeted therapies.
Nirali N. Shah, M.D. of the NCI’s POB will be Principal Investigator for the study, and Daniel Alkon, M.D., President and Chief Scientific Officer of Neurotrope, will serve as Co- Principal Investigator.
“We believe that this collaboration with the NCI’s Center for Cancer Research provides further validation of the potential for Bryostatin-1 to affect disease pathways across a broad spectrum of indications,” said Dr. Alkon. “In oncology, Bryostatin’s potential capability to increase CD22 expression may enhance the development of newer and more effective therapies for children and young adults suffering with CD22-positive leukemia and B-cell lymphoma. The enthusiasm for this collaboration stems from the POB’s long vested interest and experience targeting CD22, and we look forward to leveraging the expertise of Dr. Shah and her team to enhance our ongoing efforts to identify the most promising potential applications for Bryostatin-1.”
Bryostatin-1 is a macrocytic lactone shown to increase CD22 expression in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Under the CRADA, Bryostatin-1 is expected to be tested in the clinic to evaluate its ability to modulate CD22 in patients with relapsed/refractory CD22+ disease, while evaluating safety, toxicity and overall response.
“The initiation of our oncology collaboration with the NCI, coupled with the recent positive safety evaluation of our confirmatory Phase 2 AD trial, both demonstrate Bryostatin’s broad potential,” stated Dr. Charles Ryan, Chief Executive Officer of Neurotrope. “We enter 2019 with strong momentum clinically as well as operationally, with the successful completion of a financing in December 2018. We expect that 2019 will be a transformational year for Neurotrope as we move toward data in our AD program in the second half of the year, and seek out additional collaborations to fully explore the platform potential of Bryostatin-1.”
Neurotrope also announced today the completion of the first safety evaluation of the Company’s ongoing, placebo-controlled confirmatory Phase 2 trial evaluating Bryostatin-1 (20 µg) in 100 moderate to severe Alzheimer’s disease patients not on memantine. The study’s data safety and monitoring board found no safety concerns and recommended continuation of the trial as designed. Enrollment in the study, which was initiated in July 2018, is proceeding as planned, with data expected during the second half of 2019.
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