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Sunday, October 6, 2019

Key events this week – healthcare

Noteworthy events during the week of October 6 – 12 for healthcare investors.
MONDAY (10/7): Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:ALNY): Roundtable webcast – givosiran for acute hepatic porphyria.
Summit Therapeutics (NASDAQ:SMMT): R&D Day, NYC.
WEDNESDAY (10/9): European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology Congress, Madrid (5 days). XBiotech (NASDAQ:XBIT): Phase 2 data on bermekimab in atopic dermatitis.
THURSDAY (10/10): Alnylam Pharmaceuticals: Roundtable webcast: lumasiran for primary hyperoxaluria type 1.
SATURDAY (10/12): American Academy of Ophthalmology Annual Meeting, San Francisco (4 days). REGENXBIO (NASDAQ:RGNX): Phase 1/2a data on RGX-314 in wet AMD. Adverum Biotechnologies (NASDAQ:ADVM): Phase 1 24-week data on ADVM-022 in wet AMD. MeiraGTx Holdings (NASDAQ:MGTX): Phase 1/2 data on AAV-RPE65 in retinal dystrophy. Aldeyra Therapeutics (NASDAQ:ALDX): Data from Phase 3 ALLEVIATE study of reproxalap in allergic conjunctivitis.
https://seekingalpha.com/news/3504113-key-events-week-healthcare

Esketamine Nasal Spray Reduces Depression in Suicidal Patients

Intranasal esketamine spray (Spravato) helped achieve a rapid reduction in depressive symptoms among people at imminent risk for suicide, according to the phase III ASPIRE-2 study.
When added to standard of care, recipients of esketamine spray saw a significant 3.9-point improvement in Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) score relative to placebo within 24 hours after the first dosage (16 vs 12.2-point improvement in placebo), reported Dawn Ionescu, MD, of drug developer Janssen Research & Development in Titusville, New Jersey, at Psych Congress 2019.
This treatment benefit was even apparent within 4 hours of administration (12.5 vs 8.5-point improvement in placebo), which was a predefined secondary endpoint of the first of two phase III global studies looking at this therapy in people at imminent risk for suicide.
However, in a secondary endpoint, both esketamine and placebo improved severity of suicidality scores within 24 hours of initial dose, without any significant treatment difference between the two (-1.0 vs -1.0).
“This may be due to the substantial beneficial effects of inpatient psychiatric hospitalization in diffusing the acute suicidal crisis in patients in both treatment groups,” the researchers pointed out.
In another secondary endpoint, more patients on esketamine were able to achieve remission of depressive symptoms after 4 hours, 24 hours, and 25 days after the initial dose.
This therapy was FDA approved in March 2019 as adjunct to an oral antidepressant for treatment-resistant depression. Prior phase III studies have demonstrated its efficacy in those with moderate to severe treatment-resistant depression already on an antidepressant.
“This is the first global registration program of patients with active suicidal ideation and intent, a vulnerable and heretofore understudied population for whom there is great unmet medical need,” explained Ionescu’s group.
The study included 230 adults with major depressive disorder screening in the emergency department or another “permitted” setting, deeming them at imminent risk for suicide. Half of patients were randomized to receive 84 mg of esketamine nasal spray twice-weekly for 4 weeks, while the other half received placebo. The treatment was added to existing standard of care, which for these patients included an initial inpatient hospitalization, a newly initiated or optimized antidepressant, as well as intensive visits twice per week.
Adverse events seen with esketamine were consistent with previous findings, the most common of which were dizziness, dissociation, nausea, and dysgeusia. The drug already carries a boxed warning for risk of sedation and problems with attention, judgment, thinking, abuse, misuse, and suicidal thoughts and behaviors.
There were three suicide attempts reported in the esketamine, as well as the placebo groups, although no deaths occurred throughout the 90-day treatment and follow-up period.
Based upon the ASPIRE I & II trials, Janssen announced they submitted a New Drug Application to the FDA in October 2019, seeking a new indication for the rapid reduction of depressive symptoms in adults with major depression with active suicidal ideation with intent. If approved, this would be the first approved treatment for imminent suicide risk.
The studies were funded by Janssen. Co-authors are company employees.

Hep C Vax Flops Among Injection Drug Users in Phase I/II Trial

There was a silver lining to a prophylactic vaccine against hepatitis C virus (HCV) that failed to prevent chronic HCV infection: it proved that testing vaccines in a population of patients who inject drugs is possible, a researcher said here.
A phase I/II randomized trial found no effect on 6-month chronic HCV outcome among participants randomized to receive HCV vaccine or placebo (vaccine efficacy -0.529, 95% CI -2.535 to 0.339), reported Andrea Cox, MD, of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
But the vaccine was well-tolerated, and produced an immunogenic response in 78% of vaccine recipients (who responded to vaccine peptide pools in IFN-γ ELISpot assay, which measures T cell response), she reported in a late-breaking presentation at the IDWeek meeting, with joint sponsorship by the Infectious Diseases Society of America, the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society, the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA), and the HIV Medicine Association.
Cox painted a dire picture of the global HCV epidemic worldwide, saying that the chronic rate of both HCV and hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is rising.
“If the trend continues as predicted, by 2040, [it is] estimated that the mortality from HCV and HBV will exceed that of [tuberculosis], HIV, and malaria combined,” she said.
The World Health Organization is targeting HCV for elimination by 2030, but significant barriers remain, Cox noted. She added that there are 1.5 million new annual infections globally and the rising rate of incident infections in the U.S., whereas HBV, a vaccine-preventable illness, has not shown similar increases.
This vaccine was designed to generate T cell immunity based on viral vectors, and was comprised of recombinant chimpanzee adenovirus 3 vector vaccine prime followed by a recombinant modified vaccinia Ankara boost, both encoding nonstructural proteins of HCV, the authors said.
Participants included adults (ages 18-45) who inject drugs at high risk of HCV, but who were not infected with HCV at screening. They were counseled and referred to drug treatment and needle syringe programs, Cox said. Overall, 455 participants received two injections at 0 and 8 weeks of either vaccine or placebo. Their immune response was assessed and they were tested for HCV RNA to measure incident infection. They were followed for 20 months or 9 months following acquisition of infection.
But the result was the same as it has been for the past 30 years for people who have been trying to develop a vaccine against HCV, said Douglas Dieterich, MD, of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City.
“The positive is they were able to prove you can do a study in this population of IV drug users at risk for hepatitis C. The bad news is they haven’t figured out what would work yet. Hepatitis C is a smart virus,” he told MedPage Today.
Dieterich, who was not involved in the study, characterized the study as “a valiant effort, and proof of principle for drug users at high risk.”
Patients were 78% men, 61% white, and were well-balanced in gender, race/ethnicity; ILB28 status, age, and BMI were similar in both groups.
The overall incidence of infection was 13 infections per 100 person years, but there was no difference in incident infection between groups. For immunogenicity, peak response in the vaccine group was 7 days following administration of the boost vaccine.
“T-cell responses were induced, but they were less robust and less broad than in healthy volunteers,” Cox said. “It’s unknown if the vaccine response is targeting the infecting viruses, but that’s something we’re now determining.”
Examining safety, there were 79 serious adverse events reported for 65 participants (12%), but none were related to the vaccine regimen, Cox said. They included endocarditis, trauma, and overdose, which is to be expected in this population. The most common adverse events in the vaccine group were tenderness, pain and erythema, or superficial reddening of the skin. But less than 1% of vaccinated participants experienced severe reactions, including high-grade local reactions, the authors said.
Cox emphasized that the need for a vaccine is critical to interrupt HCV transmission, is significant, and critical to achieve HCV elimination goals.
“Testing vaccines in [people who inject drugs] is possible, but additional strategies will need to be considered, ideally with information gained from this vaccine in informing future vaccine design,” she said.
The study was supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).
Page and Cox disclosed no relevant relationships with industry. Co-authors disclosed support from Gilead and employment with GlaxoSmithKline and ReiThera.

Novel Sunovion Therapy for Binge-Eating Cuts Weight in Obese Adults

Dasotraline, a novel binge eating disorder treatment, helped reduce body weight in a secondary analysis, a researcher reported here.
After 12 weeks, the once-daily investigational long-acting dopamine/norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor was associated with a significant 12.57 lbs (5.7 kg) reduction in body weight reduction compared with a 0.88 lb (0.4 kg) gain in placebo, according to Leslie Citrome, MD, of New York Medical College in Valhalla.
Study participants on dasotraline also saw a 2-point reduction in BMI versus a 0.2 increase among those on placebo, she reported at Psych Congress 2019.
Far more participants on dasotraline achieved a “clinically meaningful” reduction in weight (≥5%) than those on placebo did (45.3% vs 4.1%). Nearly 14% of patients on dasotraline were also able to achieve a weight reduction of ≥10%, while no patients on placebo were able to.
When broken down by weight class, those who began dasotraline with obesity (classes 1-3) saw the greatest magnitude of weight reduction over the course of 12 weeks:
  • Obesity: -13.67 lbs (-6.2 kg)
  • Overweight: -12.79 lbs (-5.8 kg)
  • Normal weight: -10.14 lbs (-4.6 kg)
The efficacy outcomes were previously reported in two phase II/III randomized studies, which found dasotraline significantly reduced the number of binge days per week in people with moderate-to-severe binge eating disorder compared with placebo. After 12 weeks of treatment, dasotraline treatment was associated with a average 3.74-day reduction in the number of binge-eating days per week versus a 2.75-day reduction seen in placebo (P<0.0001).
The study included 155 participants randomized to receive a flexible, once-daily dose of 4, 6, or 8 mg of dasotraline. They were compared with 160 individuals on placebo. The average daily dose of dasotraline was 5.5 mg/day.
All participants (ages 18-55) were diagnosed with at least moderate binge-eating disorder according to DSM-5 criteria. This was defined as at least two or more binge-eating days per week for a minimum of 6 months, or 3-plus binge-eating days per week during the past 2 weeks before randomization. The vast majority of the participants were white females, with an average of 4.3 binge-eating days per week and 5.6 binge-eating episodes per week.
Over 75% of the cohort had obesity at the start of the study, evenly distributed between obesity class I (24.9% BMI 30 to <35), II (29.3% BMI 35 to <40), and III (21.8% BMI ≥40). Around 18% of the cohort were considered overweight, with a BMI from 25 to <30, but <6% of the cohort had a BMI <25.
In another secondary analysis led by Citrome presented another secondary analysis at Psych Congress 2019, showing that dasotraline significantly reduced binge-related obsessional thoughts and compulsive behaviors.
Measured on the Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive scale Modified for Binge Eating (YBOCS-BE), dasotraline participants had a significant change in total score (effect size=0.96), obsessions subscale score (effect size=0.95), and compulsions subscale score (effect size =0.87) compared with placebo. Improvements in all these scales were significant after only 2 weeks of treatment.
Compared with placebo, significant improvements were seen in several types of obsessional thoughts and compulsive behaviors measured for in the questionnaire subscales:
  • Degree of control over thoughts to binge eat
  • Resistance to thoughts to binge eat
  • Distress associated with thoughts to binge eat
  • Interference due to thoughts to binge eat
  • Time occupied by obsessive thoughts to binge eat
Patients on dasotraline also saw a significant improvement in symptoms, as rated by the Binge Eating Clinical Global Impression-Severity (CGI-S) score. Among these patients, “an endpoint CGI-Severity score of 1 (normal) was achieved by 52.3% of patients, and was associated with a mean endpoint YBOCS-BE score of 0.5, indicating remission of binge-related obsessions and compulsions in the majority of patients,” Citrome’s group reported.
In July 2019, Sunovion announced the FDA accepted their New Drug Application for dasotraline seeking the indication for moderate-to-severe binge eating disorder, with an action date of May 14, 2020.
The studies were funded by Sunovion Pharmaceuticals. Co-authors are company employees.
Citrome disclosed multiple relevant relationships with industry including Sunovion.

Novel Alkermes Combo Therapy Shows Durable Antipsychotic Effects

The safety and efficacy of combination samidorphan and olanzapine (ALKS 3831) for schizophrenia was confirmed during an open-label extension of the ENLIGHTEN-1 trial.
During this 52-week extension, the significant improvement in mean Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) score was maintained in those who continued on samidorphan/olanzapine, dropping an average of 16.2 points from baseline (P<0.001). The improvement in mean Clinical Global Impression-Severity (CGI-S) score was also maintained long-term in these patients, decreasing an average of 0.9 points, reported Sergey Yagoda, PhD, of Alkermes in Waltham, Massachusetts, the agent’s developer.
The investigational schizophrenia treatment is a once-daily dose of a fixed combination of 10 mg of the opioid modulator samidorphan with the atypical antipsychotic olanzapine (Zyprexa) in 5-mg, 10-mg, 15-mg, 20-mg doses. The combination treatment is designed to provide symptom improvement while reducing the weight gain often associated with antipsychotics.
July 2019, Alkermes expanded its New Drug Application (NDA) to include the treatment of bipolar I disorder and schizophrenia.
The current study builds upon previously reported positive 4-week data, and included 281 patients with schizophrenia (ages 18-70) who completed the initial treatment phase of ENLIGHTEN-1.
Around half of patients experienced at least one adverse event (AE) during follow-up, which were mild to moderate. The most common AEs reported were increased weight gain, somnolence, headache, and nasopharyngitis. Ten serious AEs were reported and all were deemed unrelated to samidorphan/olanzapine.
By the end of the extension study, about 52% of patients were considered to be “PANSS responders,” defined as achieving a ≥30% improvement in total score.
Patients who were enrolled in the 4-week randomized trial on olanzapine alone, and then were switched to combination samidorphan/olanzapine for the extension trial, also saw a significant improvement in PANSS total score and CGI-S score from baseline.
However, these individuals who switched to the combination treatment after the initial 4-weak trial saw greater weight gain from baseline of the extension through 52-weeks of treatment versus those who remained on samidorphan/olanzapine:
  • Placebo to samidorphan/olanzapine: gained 2.91 kg
  • Olanzapine alone to samidorphan/olanzapine: gained 1.05 kg
  • Remained on samidorphan/olanzapine: gained 1.75 kg
About 27% of participants who completed the 52-week extension saw a clinically significant weight gain of ≥7%, while 15% saw a weight increase of ≥10%. Other laboratory parameters, including HbA1c, fasting glucose, total cholesterol, LDL and HDL cholesterol, and triglycerides did not see a significant change during follow-up.
The investigators noted some study limitations, especially the fact that it was an open-label study with no comparator, so “only limited conclusions can be drawn from efficacy and safety data.”
The phase III ENLIGHTEN-2 safety study, also presented here, took another look at weight gain and metabolic outcomes in patients on samidorphan/olanzapine. These outcomes build upon the previously reported phase III efficacy outcomes from ENLIGHTEN-2.
The 24-week open-label safety study included 561 “clinically stable but moderately ill” individuals with schizophrenia, according to Christoph Correll, MD, of Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine in Hempstead, New York, and colleagues. Compared to those on olanzapine alone, patients on the combination treatment saw significantly less weight gain:
  • Samidorphan/olanzapine: 4.21% average weight gain
  • Olanzapine only: 6.59% average weight gain
Similarly, 30% of patients on olanzapine alone saw a ≥10% weight gain after 24 weeks versus only 18% of combination treatment patients. Significantly fewer patients on the combination saw an increase in waist circumference.
About 74% of participants on the combination experienced any AE during follow-up, while 82% on olanzapine alone experienced any AE, mainly driven by weight gain.
“Although antipsychotic efficacy was not a primary endpoint in this study, improvements in PANSS scores from baseline were similar to those seen with olanzapine and consistent with improvements observed in the ENLIGHTEN-1 study,” the researchers noted in July, they also reported plans to seek an indication for bipolar I disorder in addition to schizophrenia.
The ENLIGHTEN trials were funded by Alkermes. Co-authors are company employees.
Correll disclosed multiple relevant relationships with industry including Alkermes.

Bayer says October U.S. glyphosate trial delayed until February

A pending U.S. lawsuit over claims related to Bayer’s (BAYGn.DE) glyphosate-based herbicide Roundup has been delayed, the company said on Sunday, with a new court date set for February, 2020.
“The Oct. 15, 2019 trial date for Winston v. Monsanto in St. Louis City has been postponed,” Bayer said in a statement.

The lawsuit is the latest of several to be delayed as mediator Ken Feinberg tries to negotiate a settlement between the company and U.S. plaintiffs after a California jury in August last year found that Monsanto should have warned of alleged cancer risks.
“With the change in the trial schedule and no trial dates set through the rest of the year, the appeals of the three completed trials will be a significant focus of the litigation in the months ahead,” Bayer said.

Handelsblatt first reported the latest delay earlier on Sunday.
A court document from the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, dated October 4, said a new court date had been set for February 10.
The number of U.S. plaintiffs blaming Roundup and other glyphosate-based weed killers for cancer has been rising continuously to stand at 18,400 as of July 11, hitting Bayer’s share price.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-bayer-glyphosate-lawsuit/bayer-says-october-u-s-glyphosate-trial-delayed-until-february-idUSKBN1WL0G7

Biotech week ahead, Oct. 7

Notwithstanding the ESMO conference generating some huge moves in some stocks, last week turned out to be a muted one for biotechs.
A few FDA approvals came through, with Puma Biotechnology Inc PBYI 2.15% getting a label expansion for its breast cancer drug Nerlynx and Novartis AG NVS 0.82%‘s Entresto, a combo therapy, given the go ahead for pediatric heart failure.
Here are the key biotech catalysts for the unfolding week.

Conferences

  • European Huntington Association Conference: Oct. 4–6 in Bucharest, Romania
  • Experts Gather on Cardiovascular Disorders and Cardiology Research: Oct. 7-8 in Paris, France
  • 5th Annual Congress on Infectious Diseases: Oct. 7-8 in Frankfurt, Germany
  • 9th International Conference on Neurological Disorders & Stroke: Oct. 7-8 in Dublin, Ireland
  • Chardan 3rd Annual Genetic Medicines Conference: Oct. 7-8 in New York City
  • Jefferies Gene Therapy/Editing Summit: Oct. 8 in New York City
  • 37th World Cancer Conference: Oct. 9-10 in Dublin
  • 28th European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology, or EADV, Congress: Oct. 9-13, in Madrid, Spain
  • Ophthalmology Innovation Summit: Oct. 10 in San Francisco, California
  • American Academy of Ophthalmology, or AAO: Oct. 12-15, in San Francisco

PDUFA Dates

The FDA is scheduled to rule on Pfenex Inc PFNX 6.05%‘s PF708, a therapeutic equivalent of Eli Lilly And Co LLY 0.81%‘s Forteo, which was approved in 2002 to treat osteoporosis in men and menopausal women, who are at high risk of having a fracture. The PDUFA date is set for Monday.
The regulatory body will issue its verdict Tuesday on Clinuvel Pharmaceuticals Ltd CLVLY 7.12%‘s NDA for Scenesse, which is being evaluated as a preventative treatment for phototoxicity and anaphylactoid reactions in adult patients with erythropoietic protoporphyria.

Clinical Trial Readouts

28th EADV Congress Presentations

Akari Therapeutics PLC AKTX – Additional Phase 2 data for Coversin in bullous pemphigoid (Thursday)
Concert Pharmaceuticals Inc CNCE 0.86% – Phase 2 data for CTP-543 in alopecia areata (Saturday)

AAO 2019 Presentations

Adverum Biotechnologies Inc ADVM 0.54% – Additional Phase 1 data for ADVM-022 in wet age-related macular degeneration Friday)
Regenxbio Inc RGNX 1.4% – Phase 1/2a data for RGX-314 in wet age-related macular degeneration (Friday)

IPOs

BioNTech, a German biotech developing individualized monotherapies for cancer, is planning a 13.2-million share IPO, which is estimated to be priced between $18 and $20. The company proposes to list shares on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol “BNTX.”
Vir Biotechnology, a biotech developing immunologic therapies for infectious diseases, is seeking to list shares on the Nasdaq through an IPO of 7.14 million shares in the price range of $20 to $22 per share. Shares will be listed under the ticker symbol “VIR.”

IPO Quiet Period Expiry

Satsuma Pharmaceuticals Inc STSA 4.58%
SpringWorks Therapeutics Inc SWTX 5.47%
10X Genomics Inc TXG 6.92%
https://www.benzinga.com/general/biotech/19/10/14541123/the-week-ahead-in-biotech-pfenex-and-clinuvel-on-the-radar-ahead-of-fda-decisions-2-ipos-on-deck