Spring Bank Pharmaceuticals, based in Hopkinton, Massachusetts, announced
it was discontinuing development of inarigivir soproxil for chronic
hepatitis B virus (HBV). The therapy was in Phase II development.
The company based the decision on safety information after unexpected
serious adverse events, including one patient death in its Phase IIb
CATALYST trial. Inarigivir is an orally available immunomodulator that
binds the cellular proteins retinoic acid-inducible gene 1 (RIG-1) to
inhibit viral replication and induce the intracellular interferon
signaling pathways.
“We are deeply saddened by the death of a patient in our CATALYST 2
trial,” said Martin Driscoll, president and chief executive officer of
Spring Bank. “Because we are guided by an overriding interest in
protecting patients, we have made the difficult decision to discontinue
the further development of inarigivir for the treatment of HBV at Spring
Bank. We will continue to work in close collaboration with external
experts and our clinical study investigators to provide the care
necessary for all study patients and will continue to conduct a series
of investigative actions to better understand the unexpected serious
adverse events observed in our Phase IIb program.”
On December 26, 2019, the company indicated
it had halted dosing and enrolling patients in the CATALYST trial as
well as all other studies of inarigivir in chronic HBV. Lab tests from
three patients showed hepatocellular dysfunction and an increased
alanine transaminase (ALT) level consistent with liver injury.
It essentially plans to abandon R&D into HBV but will refocus on
immuno-oncology and inflammation. This is primarily its lead product
candidate from its STING agonist platform, SB 11285, which is in a Phase
Ia/Ib trial.
On November 20, 2019, Spring Bank announced
it had begun dosing patients in the Phase I trial of SB 11285 in
patients with advanced solid tumors. Part 1 of the trial is a
dose-escalation study with SB 11285 alone. It will be followed by a
combination with a checkpoint inhibitor. Part 2 of the trial will
evaluate intravenous SB 11285 antitumor activity in combination with a
checkpoint inhibitor in various tumor types. The company hopes to report
topline data in mid-2020.
“Working with our principal investigators in the United States, we
are thrilled to announce that we have been able to deliver SB 11285
intravenously to the first patient in our Phase I trial of advanced
solid tumors,” said Atif Abbas, vice president and head of
Oncology/Immunology Development at Spring Bank, at the time.
He went on to say, “We believe the primary benefit of delivering SB
11285 by the intravenous route, as opposed to intratumorally like other
STING agonist compounds currently in development, is the potential
ability to treat a broader range of cancers and patients in the
community oncology treatment setting.”
Now that Spring Bank is halting all HBV drug development, it is
launching talks with external parties to license the program. And by
eliminating the costs related to the HBV program, it believes it has
funds to continue operations into late 2022. As of December 31, 2019,
the company reported $54.5 million in cash.
https://www.biospace.com/article/spring-bank-pharma-discontinues-hepatitis-b-drug-development/
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