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Monday, August 5, 2019

Bargain hunters move into Lexicon, up 14%

Beaten down biopharma Lexicon Pharmaceuticals (LXRX +13.7%) perks up on increased volume, bucking the broad market’s sour mood.
Bargain hunters have apparently been spurred into action in response to a modest level of insider buying and positive revisions from certain sell-side shops.
Shares sold off in late July after Sanofi decided to terminate their Zynquista (sotagliflozin) collaboration.

Abbott recalls certain Ellipse defibrillators

Citing a faulty manufacturing process, Abbott (ABT -2.2%) is recalling certain models of its Ellipse Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators (ICDs) distributed during ~6 weeks in May/June due to the risk of an electrical failure from partially exposed aluminum wires. It says there have been no reports of failures to date related to the devices in question.

Nobio gets FDA approval for anti-bacterial dental fillings

Israel’s Nobio Ltd said on Monday it received approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to market its anti-bacterial composite designed to remain in the teeth for decades.
Nobio said it will now gain access to the $1.4 billion global dental materials market. According to iData Research, direct restoratives, or fillings, account for over a third of the market.
Nobio said it will make its technology available to dentists through its Infinix brand and will also license it to other manufacturers. Nobio is negotiating with distributors and manufacturers and plans to announce its first commercial partnerships later this year. Founded four years ago, Nobio raised $9 million from Israel’s aMoon Fund and Ole Jensen, a dental surgeon and co-founder of the ClearChoice network of dental implant clinics. Known as white fillings, dental composite restoratives treat tooth decay by filling cavities with materials matching a patient’s tooth shade and strength. More than 200 million tooth restorations are performed annually in the United States, mostly to replace existing fillings that deteriorate due to bacteria.

Russia reports African Swine Fever outbreak near its border with China

An outbreak African Swine Fever (ASF) has been detected at a small farm in Russia’s Primorsk region near its border with China, Russia’s agriculture safety watchdog said on Monday.
The ASF virus is a highly contagious fever among pigs, but it is not dangerous to humans.

Plan B or bust for Glycomimetics

The failure of its lead sickle cell project forces Glycomimetics to pivot to a leukaemia asset, but the company’s approach has taken a huge blow.
Two weeks after its stock started tanking, and one day after a run-of-the-mill quarterly earnings call, Glycomimetics confirmed the worst. A phase III trial of its lead sickle cell therapy, rivipansel, had failed, and it seems highly likely that the project is dead.
Shares in the company crashed 61% in early trade today, adding to the 29% of value that had ebbed away since mid-July. The curious timing of this collapse in confidence aside, there seems little remaining optimism for Glycomimetics’ approach. With a clinical pipeline based solely on selectin inhibition, rivipansel’s blow-up has understandably been taken as a bad omen.
Very little is actually known about the results at this stage. All that has been disclosed by the company and Pfizer, which licensed rivipansel back in 2011, is that the pivotal Reset study failed to meet primary and key secondary endpoints. Rivipansel was being tested in sickle cell patients hospitalised for a vaso-occlusive crisis, a period in which sufferers experience extreme pain; the partners had been hoping to show that the project could alleviate suffering, reduce opioid use and help patients leave hospital more quickly.
Until full results are published it is hard to say much more about rivipansel’s performance, but the tone of the statement suggests an unequivocal failure and the end of the partnership. The project always had its doubters – a prior phase II study failed, and the pivotal trial used a new primary endpoint and a novel setting – and many will conclude that this news only confirms rivipansel’s lack of activity.
Sticking together
Rivipansel is a pan-selectin antagonist; selectins are a family of adhesion molecules, and in sickle cell the aim was to reduce adhesion of red blood cells, making it harder for them to aggregate. Results from other projects in this area have been mixed.
While Modus Therapeutics’ sevuparin, which binds to P and L-selectin, failed in phase II earlier this year, Novartis has managed to show a reduction in vaso-occlusive crises with crizanlizumab, which binds exclusively to P-selectin, and is seeking regulatory approvals. However, sickle cell is considered an extremely tough disease to treat, and it seems likely that rivipansel was simply not potent enough to make a mark.
Glycomimetics’  entire clinical pipeline is based on similar technology. Its next project is uproleselan, which inhibits E-selectin. In blood cancers E-selectin is said to bind cancer cells within the bone marrow, the idea being that uproleselan can sensitise patients to chemotherapy by mobilising the cancer cells into the bloodstream.
A phase III trial is testing this hypothesis, seeking to recruit 380 patients with relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukaemia, and due to yield topline results towards the end of 2020.
A phase I/II study generated median overall survival of 8.8 months, around three months longer than is typically expected in this population, according to the company. Supportive sellside analysts reckon that the pivotal study has a good chance of succeeding, largely because it allows more doses of uproleselan than have been tested previously.
Falling apart
Not everyone shares this view. Detractors point to a deterioration of the survival data seen in phase I/II, from presentations at Ash 2017 and Ash 2018. Others argue that the company’s claim that E-selectin expression correlates with overall survival is only weakly supported.
It will be some months before Glycomimetics can show whether its approach has any legs. Another asset, GMI-1359, which hits E-selectin and CXCR4, is due to start a phase Ib trial in breast cancer patients with bone metastases in the second half of the year, with data also due later in 2020.
However with the company’s market value falling to cash today, it is pretty clear that investors assume that Glycomimetics’ platform is firing duds. Few seem willing to hang around and find out whether they are wrong.

No Enigma in mid-stage success, Allakos insists

few months ago the immunology-focused group Allakos already stood as the best-performing biotech float of 2018. Today its investors found out that their enthusiasm had been well placed, with the company’s lead asset, AK002, yielding positive results in a small phase II trial in eosinophilic gastritis or gastroenteritis.
Allakos surged 110% in early trade, bringing its market cap near $3bn. The next question for the markets is whether this is an overblown reaction; the data seem strong, with all prespecified primary and secondary measures apparently met, but the use of per-protocol analyses is something investors should always examine closely.
Eosinophilic gastritis and gastroenteritis are rare inflammatory conditions of the stomach and GI tract thought to be driven by mast cells and eosinophils. AK002 is an antibody that activates Siglec-8, an inhibitory receptor on these two cell types, its effect being to deplete eosinophils and inhibit mast cells, thus breaking the inflammatory cascade driving the two diseases.
The study Allakos toplined today, Enigma, had a relatively simple design, testing 1mg/kg or 3mg/kg escalating AK002 doses versus placebo, and measuring as the primary endpoint changes in eosinophil counts. There were two secondary measures, of which change in total symptom score looks to be the more important as far as showing an effect on disease is concerned.
There seems no doubt about the robustness of the primary endpoint, which effectively validates AK002’s mechanism. Importantly, the statistical strength of this readout does not change if considering all 65 subjects recruited, or if the data are cut by just the 59 who complied with the protocol from start to finish.
The question arises as regards the total symptom scores, a metric that reflects AK002’s actual activity on eosinophilic gastritis/gastroenteritis. Here the per-protocol analysis yields a strongly significant result, with a p value of 0.0012, but the p value falls to 0.0359 if considering the intent-to-treat population.
And, within that ITT population, the effect is driven by the high AK002 dose, with the low dose lacking statistical significance (p=0.1556).
SUMMARY OF THE ENIGMA TRIAL (NCT03496571) OF AK002
PlaceboAK002 (both doses combined)
Eosinophil counts (per protocol)*+10%-95% (p<0.0001)
Eosinophil counts (intent to treat)p<0.0001
Total symptom score (per protocol)-24%-53% (p=0.0012)
Total symptom score (intent to treat)p=0.0359
Source: Allakos presentation; *primary endpoint.
That said, losing power in a study as small as Enigma is perhaps unsurprising. Moreover, Allakos insisted on a call today that Enigma’s statistical analysis specifically called for a per-protocol assessment, and – crucially – the six non-complying subjects had been excluded before the trial’s blind was broken.
Reasons for non-compliance were receiving only one of four dosing cycles (two subjects), refusal to complete the study questionnaire (one) and altering subjects’ steroid use (three).
Allakos wants to start a phase III eosinophilic gastritis/gastroenteritis study next year, and says just one pivotal trial will suffice for approval. In the meantime, eosinophils and mast cells play a role in numerous inflammatory conditions including conjunctivitis, Crohn’s and some types of asthma, pointing to additional possible AK002 uses.
And some extra cash, which Allakos will doubtless seek to raise on the back of its now strengthened valuation, will not go amiss either.

Foamix files U.S. application for FMX103 for acne-like skin condition

Foamix (FOMX -4.1%) has submitted a marketing application to the FDA seeking approval of topical foam FMX103 for the treatment of moderate-to-severe papulopustular rosacea (PR) in patients at least 18 years old.
PR is an inflammatory skin condition characterized by red pus-filled bumps that looks like acne. It occurs predominantly in fair-skinned people.