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Thursday, February 28, 2019

After a Speedy IPO, Equillium Expands Antibody R&D to Renal Disease

Equillium, a biotech that’s looking to develop an antibody drug for immuno-inflammatory diseases, has added a form of renal disease to the indications for which it aims to develop medicines.
It’s the latest step in a fast-moving journey for the La Jolla, CA-based company, which raisedabout $65 million in an initial public offering in October just 19 months after its founding.
Headed by former Amylin CEO Dan Bradbury, Equillium (NASDAQ: EQ) has licensed the drug, itolizumab, which it calls EQ001, from Indian pharma giant Biocon Limited for development in the United States and Canada.
Equillium was formed to advance itolizumab, which had already undergone Phase 1 testing by Biocon in about 330 patients in Australia, as a treatment for acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD and cGVHD), a complication seen in transplant patients, and for a severe form of asthma.
On Tuesday, Equillium added lupus nephritis (LN), a kind of kidney damage often seen in patients with lupus—a chronic condition in which a person’s immune system attacks their own healthy tissues and organs—to the list of therapeutic areas in which it will study the drug.
Lupus affects five million people globally, with 16,000 new cases reported annually, according to the Lupus Foundation of America. The kidney inflammation characteristic of LN can eventually cause renal failure. No FDA-approved treatment exists; medications used to relieve LN symptoms, including corticosteroids and immunosuppression drugs, often come with side effects.
The condition is one of the most common and dangerous complications of lupus, according to Kenneth Farber, president and CEO of the Lupus Research Alliance, in the Equillium statement. Equillium says there are more than 100,000 LN Patients in the U.S.
The company plans to initiate a proof-of-concept trial for EQ001 as an LN treatment in the second half of this year, and says the data will inform future development of the drug in systemic lupus as well as a form of the disease that affects solely the skin.
The company also announced it would delay its plans for a Phase 2 trial of the drug in patients with cGVHD until data from a Phase 1b/2 aGVHD trial, slated to start in March with about 84 patients, is available: a move it described as a more “sequential” approach to its study of the drug in patients with GVHD. The FDA has granted EQ001 fast-track approval for the treatment of aGVHD and orphan drug status for the prevention and treatment of the condition.
Equillium also aims to launch a proof-of-concept trial in severe asthma sometime next quarter. The company is also eying gastrointestinal and neuroinflammation conditions as potential indications for EQ001 in the future.
The company said EQ001 targets a receptor called CD6 that modulates the activity of T-effector cells, which have been implicated in a broad range of immuno-inflammatory diseases. The aim is to dampen the activity of these cells.
The compound is the only one to which Equillium has rights, although Bruce Steel, Equillium’s president and chief business officer, said in an interview with Xconomy earlier this year that the company is actively looking for additional programs to in-license.
In that interview, the management team described how the company came together and how and why they took it from inception to IPO in less than two years.
Bradbury’s previous company Amylin, a San Diego developer of diabetes treatments, was acquired by Bristol-Myers Squibb (NYSE: BMY) in 2012 for $5.3 billion. Bradbury, who spent 18 years at Amylin and oversaw the launch of three medicines there, was subsequently recruited by Steel as the first advisor to an in-house venture fund Steel had started at BioMed Realty, a San Diego-based real estate investment trust (REIT). Previously, Steel was in the biotech industry, as an executive at San Diego’s Anaphore, a co-founder and CEO of Rincon Pharmaceuticals, and head of corporate development at Ambit Biosciences.
(BioMed was acquired in 2016 by private equity giant Blackstone for about $8 billion.)
Bradbury also joined the board of directors at Biocon, with which he had worked while at Amylin—a relationship that, a few years later, would prove serendipitous.
Equillium’s chief scientific officer, Stephen Connolly, joined the BioMed ventures team in 2016 following an introduction from Bradbury. It was Connolly, previously with San Diego biotech aTyr Pharma (NASDAQ: LIFE), who brought itolizumab to Steel’s attention.
“Bruce [Steel] said, ‘Do you think [Biocon] would be interested, if we started a company, to turn it over and make it available for us to develop here in North America?’” Bradbury said.
Biocon was amenable, and Equillium (initially called Attenuate Biopharmaceuticals) acquired the U.S. and Canadian rights to itolizumab, which is approved and marketed in India by Biocon as ALZUMAb as a treatment for moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, a skin condition. The drug is an outlier for Biocon, which is primarily a maker of biosimilars.
The deal with Biocon, India’s largest biopharma company, includes an exclusive supply agreement for clinical and commercial EQ001, which Biocon makes at commercial scale at an FDA-regulated facility. Biocon, which is not well known in the U.S., is the fourth largest maker of insulin worldwide.
After forming Equillium, the management team raised funds from friends and family. Later, the executives visited a number of crossover investors—companies that invest in both public and private entities—as they considered how best to raise funds to advance its programs.
Bradbury and his team soon realized they could move quickly to the public markets.
“The reality was that we were able to get the IND approved [to start clinical testing] in a very timely manner, we were very capital efficient in terms of what it took, so we still had plenty of capital,” Bradbury said. “We talked to a number of investment bankers, and basically had the opportunity take the company public and fully fund all the programs we had been planning to do.”
The management team’s experience at public companies also smoothed the path, he added. Jason Keyes, the company’s chief financial officer, worked with Bradbury at Amylin and held roles at other publicly traded businesses, as did Christine Zadelmayer, Equillium’s vice president of operations.
Today the company has 14 people, plus roughly double that number of people working remotely as long-term consultants. As of Sept. 30, it had recorded net losses of about $9.5 million since its inception in March 2017. The funding it had as of the end of 2018, about $66 million, is enough to keep the company operating for at least the next 24 months, according to a recent document filed with securities regulators.

Heat Biologics Interim Phase 2 Lung Cancer Data at ASCO-SITC

Heat Biologics, Inc. (NASDAQ: HTBX), a biopharmaceutical company developing immunotherapies designed to activate a patient’s immune system against cancer, today announced updated interim results from its ongoing Phase 2 study investigating HS-110 in combination with Bristol-Myers Squibb’s anti-PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor, nivolumab (Opdivo�), in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The results were presented today at the ASCO-SITC Clinical Immuno-Oncology Symposium by Daniel Morgensztern, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine and Director of Thoracic Oncology, Washington University School of Medicine, and Lead Investigator in the trial. Data were presented on both Cohort A and Cohort B of the trial. Cohort A enrolls only previously treated patients who have never received a checkpoint inhibitor (CPI), while Cohort B enrolls patients who received a minimum of 4 months of treatment with a CPI as part of their prior therapy, but subsequently had documented progressive disease.
“The treatment landscape for NSCLC has fundamentally changed as the number of patients who receive first line checkpoint inhibitor therapy is rapidly increasing,” said COL(ret) George E Peoples, MD, FACS, Heat’s Chief Medical Advisor. “The preliminary data from our Cohort B is increasingly relevant and potentially exciting as it suggests that the addition of HS-110 to nivolumab may restore anti-tumor activity in patients whose disease has progressed after treatment with a CPI.”
Jeff Hutchins, Ph.D., Chief Scientific and Operating Officer of Heat said, “The observed response rates and durability of disease stabilization support our mechanistic hypothesis that the broad, T-cell mediated immune response activated by HS-110 may improve patient survival when administered in combination with a CPI. The Cohort B data suggest that HS-110 may improve clinical outcomes for patients who have lost the benefit of treatment with a checkpoint inhibitor. We look forward to completing enrollment in this trial in Q2 and releasing additional results later this year as the data matures.”

MediciNova publishes findings on MN-166 in glioblastoma

MediciNova announced that Scientific Reports has published results from the animal model study evaluating MN-166, or ibudilast, in glioblastoma. The article, “Ibudilast sensitizes glioblastoma to temozolomide by targeting Macrophage Migration Inhibitory Factor,” is the first publication reporting the potential clinical utility of MN-166 for GBM. Key findings in this publication include the following: In an in-vitro study using patient derived cell lines, MN-166 combined with temozolomide showed significant synergism in cell cycle arrest and apoptosis, and In an in-vivo patient derived xenograft model study, combination treatment with MN-166 and TMZ resulted in significantly longer overall survival. Yuichi Iwaki, M.D., Ph.D., President and Chief Executive Officer of MediciNova, Inc., commented, “We are very pleased that these findings were published in Scientific Reports. These findings compelled us to open an IND application and evaluate MN-166 in a clinical trial of patients with GBM. Enrollment is ongoing at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.”

Acadia reports Q4 same facility revenue up 3.8% 

As part of its Q4 earnings, Acadia also reported Q4 patient days up 2.6% and revenue per patient up 1.2%.


https://thefly.com/landingPageNews.php?id=2872744

Nuvectra price target lowered to $20 from $25 at Piper Jaffray

Piper Jaffray analyst Matt O’Brien lowered his price target on Nuvectra to $20 after its Q4 results, saying the new price target accounts for the divestiture of NeuroNexus and a modest push out of Virtis approval in his model. The analyst is also keeping his Overweight rating, noting that the company is headed for another year of increased share in the spinal cord stimulation market with expectations of adding another 15-20 reps to its sales force this year.

Rigel Pharmaceuticals’s Tavalisse seeing continued uptake, says Piper Jaffray

Piper Jaffray analyst Christopher Raymond kept his Overweight rating and $8 price target on Rigel Pharmaceuticals after Q4 results indicated “continued uptake of Tavalisse”. The analyst says the company is benefiting from the “improvements in physician awareness and an expanding sales force serving as growth levers that will continue into 2019.” Raymond adds that the pipeline efforts of Rigel Pharmaceuticals are on track with its Phase 3 wAIHA trial set to start in the first half of this year.

Hikma establishes partnership with Melinta in MENA

Hikma Pharmaceuticals PLC (Hikma, Group) (LSE: HIK) (NASDAQ Dubai: HIK)  (OTC: HKMPY) (rated Ba1 Moody’s / BB+ S&P, both stable) announces an exclusive license, supply and distribution agreement with Melinta Therapeutics  (Melinta), for Melinta’s intravenous and oral formulations of Baxdela™ (delafloxacin) across all its MENA markets. In addition, Hikma has the right of first negotiation for all other products in Melinta’s portfolio and pipeline in the region.
Baxdela™ is a novel antibiotic product used for the treatment of adult patients with acute bacterial skin and skin structure infections (ABSSSI). Baxdela™ is a fluoroquinolone with demonstrated efficacy against both gram-positive and gram-negative pathogens, including MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus). Baxdela™ was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2017.
Hikma is a leading provider of antibiotics in the MENA region, offering a wide range of products to doctors and pharmacists.  As Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) continues to pose treatment challenges for healthcare professionals, offering this new, innovative product in the region will arm them with new ways to combat this growing threat.
Mazen Darwazah, Executive Vice Chairman and President of MENA said, “We are very pleased to establish a partnership with Melinta and to be able to bring this innovative product to the region.  As the challenge of AMR grows, we have an important role to play in helping to equip doctors here in MENA with the latest and most innovative developments.”