Today, Wave announced the licensing of their (stereopure) antisense technology to Japanese
Big Pharma Takeda for their application in the central nervous system
(CNS). In return for $110M in upfront
cash, a $60M equity investment and other biobuck goodies, Takeda receives an
option to co-develop/commercialize ASO candidates for the treatment of
Huntington’s Disease (HD), Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), and type III Spinocerebellar
Ataxia (SCA3). Takeda also receives
opt-in right to additional preclinical programs.
This deal
has clearly been driven by the outstanding data gathered by rival Ionis and its
corporate partner Biogen in applying phosphorothioate antisense chemistry for diseases of the CNS. This not only includes the
remarkable efficacy and commercial success seen with splice-skipping oligo Spinraza for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), but also preclinical knockdown and
biodistribution data from many other CNS programs.
Also of
note, Ionis and Roche disclosed last December statistically significant knockdown of huntingtin in people with HD, the same indication as Wave’s lead neurology
program which has entered clinical development.
Important additional color for the Ionis HD candidate, especially
relating to the actual depth of target knockdown is to be presented at the upcoming CHDI conference at the end of
this month.
To wit, the
efficacy of exon skipper Spinraza relied on gain-of-function where minor (say
20%) target engagement may already translate into significant clinical benefit. Most other programs, however, aim at
inhibiting a disease-causing molecule from being made. Here, you may want more like
something of the order of 50%+ target engagement.
Another
wrinkle is that the target cells in the CNS will differ from indication to
indication whilst antisense efficacy is not homogeneous throughout the CNS, so the
SMA and HD program data will not have de-risked all the indications.
Nevertheless,
it is crystal clear that phoshorothioate oligos hold tremendous value for the
many diseases of the CNS of high unmet medical need for which the industry is
more and more relying on gene-targeted approaches after years of failures with
small molecules. And kudos to Wave for
retaining substantial commercial value to the licensed programs.
So thank
you, Ionis, for making it exceptionally easy for them!
No comments:
Post a Comment