As you will probably know already, Regulus Therapeutics surprised us this
week with the sudden departures of both their CEO and CSO. These two individuals also happened to be the
insiders selling major positions in the stock earlier this year just days ahead
of critical data to be released on their lead clinical candidate, RG-101 for
the treatment of HCV ('Reading the tea leaves on Regulus insider sales').
While this would be a good reason for what looks like a sacking of the company’s two key executives (especially since
the exodus came as a pair), for investors the all-important question is whether
it is also related to bad news that we do not know about yet. Most importantly, does this also have anything to do
with the failure to report the viral resistance analysis which had been promised
to us for the EASL meeting in April?
It is this analysis that will determine whether the miR-122
inhibitor can facilitate 4-week treatment regimens which must be the goal for
this asset. This is because RG-101 is
the only serious long-acting agent out there in the HCV drug development arena
and 4 weeks of oral, short-acting antivirals do not seem capable of getting rid
of the virus.
If there was no resistance to RG-101, based on the available
data RG-101 given on week 4 would add ~6 weeks to deep viral suppression to
the treatment regimen, in a way resembling a 10-week oral regimen which have much higher
odds of viral clearance.
If viral resistance (and not waning drug levels as I am assuming) played a role in the rebounds
seen in the single-dose study, then this would not necessarily be the
case. I say ‘not necessarily’ because
even then, the risk of developing viral resistance to RG-101 should be much lower when given in
combination with other agents as is the plan.
Take-home: I remain cautious (but not short any more)
prepared to take advantage of another bout of panic selling that could come
with the release of the resistance analysis.
The quality of the new leadership to lead the exciting microRNA platform
will also indicate whether Regulus can finally live up to its original promise.
Long-term, whether precipitated by the insider sales or not, the changes should be good as morale at the company from what I can tell had been low.
PS: in more positive news, Regulus Therapeutics today reported
that a first-in-man study with their second most advanced microRNA Therapeutic,
RG-012 for the kidney-related orphan disease Alport Syndrome, has begun dosing.
Thanks very much for your comments. Kleanthis did leave a bad taste.
ReplyDeleteKleanthis should be in leg irons and getting reamed up the kornhole by Bubba - his 6 ft. 8 - 425 lb cellmate
ReplyDeleteIf MRK branded Moderna is to become the gatekeeper of mRNA, then where is PFE's cut of the pie? lol
ReplyDeleteMr. X has left RGLS to pursue, what he must consider as better than staying at RGLS on a sky high salary with options for millions of dollars more if the science proves itself, investment opportunities in the biotech space.
ReplyDeleteThat can tell us several things. One, that RGLS is not a good investment in his opinion and he has scarpered while the money was there to take and before the market gets wind of what it is he knows. The reasons for RGLS being a bad investment are probably many fold. Not the least being IP ownership.
Or two, that mRNA isn't all that and the breakthrough lies elsewhere.
The third and more likely is, that the biggest boom in life sciences is about to get underway and he wants to take his loot and grow it exponentially instead of the company from a position of anonymity because at the root of it all he is looking after himself first before anyone else.
To allege he was sacked because of insider trading is misleading. For goodness sake, why would the company issue stock and options if they did not expect them to be sold at some stage? The company could've requested they be put in escrow to ensure these sales didn't happen as a condition of issuance. The perception of what Dirk is alleging is all too easy to jump to otherwise.
And as the other comment touched on, where is the governance? They must have some.
The logical conclusion to this event is Dirk's conclusion is all too simple and convenient. Making it most likely contrived or naïve. Mr. X will be acting in a perfectly rational way given the information he has.
You leave out Mr. Y and what he had in common with Mr. X
ReplyDeleteRead didn't want either of them. Where's Art Krieg at this days?
ReplyDeleteBenitec to reverse into RGLS. Peter French to take the helm. The giveaway was Mr. X talking about sandwiches on CNBC and Dirk showing a Bacon Lettuce Tomato sandwich on his blog about RGLS.
ReplyDeleteIt's the right fit. Right IP. Right people.