The last 2
weeks have been busy ones in the lands of RNAi Therapeutics.
Here, I would therefore like to offer my take on the most important
developments.
Alnylam’s
Primary Hyperoxaluria Drug Breezes Through Clinic
With 20 subjects
on Lumasiran, a GalNAc-RNAi targeting glycolate oxidase, for a median of 7
months, the investigational treatment for type I primary hyperoxaluria (PH1) ismore and more looking like a solid drug. If the data presented last week at a Paediatric meeting in Turkey hold up in another 30 patients, it should fly through approval onto
the market by the end of 2019.
While the
relatively small numbers in each cohort has caused a bit statistical noise, it
seemed like 3mg/kg monthly gives you an advantage over 1mg/kg monthly or 3mg/kg
monthly in terms of the key biomarker urinary oxalate. Interestingly, the company has chosen 3 times
3mg/kg monthly as the loading dose regimen in the now ongoing pivotal ILLUMINATE-A trial to be followed by dosing every 3 months. , the
initiation of which the company has just announced.
The core double-blind
portion of the trial runs for only 6 months, so I am a bit puzzled how much the
trial can inform on the value of the loading dose regimen and whether quarterly maintenance
doses are sufficiently effective. In any case, the trial design apparently was
blessed by the FDA (incl. the urinary oxalate lowering primary endpoint), so
surely they will know (e.g. based on preclinical animal data).
Regarding
the competition with the primary hyperoxaluria drug candidate from Dicerna, the
approximately 2/3 lowering of urinary oxalate and essentially all patients
getting into a range considered safe and an unremarkable safety profile sets a high
hurdle for the upcoming data presentation of DCR-PHXC at ASN later this month.
Arbutus HBV-RNAi
Drug About to Die
Yesterday, Arbutus provided an update on its LNP-enabled RNAi drug candidate for the treatment
of chronic HBV (ARB-1467) and it does not bode well. Similar to most
other drug candidates attempted and barely tried, ARB-1467 should be canned in the
not-too-distant future.
In a
combination study testing ARB-1467 in chronic HBV patients on nucleoside reverse
transcriptase inhibitor tenofovir, probably only 1 in 6 patients hit a pre-defined criteria in terms of HBsAg lowering that would allow the patient to then receive immune booster PEG-Interferon. The not very forthcoming revelation and the
fact that the data was mentioned even after dropping another shoe that its small
molecule HBV RNA destabilizer is also biting the dust makes it clear that not even the
company sees much value in ARB-1467.
What an
utter disaster this company has been since its inception as a HBV solutions entity.
Arrowhead
Early HBV Deal Further Validates
Last week,
shareholders in Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals got a lesson in biotech investing as
it shares have given up ~1/3 of its value following a nice deal
with Johnson&Johnson for the leading HBV knockdown asset in the space,
ARO-HBV.
The deal
gives Arrowhead a solid $250M in financing, including a $175M upfront fee and a
$75M investment in company stock at a premium of ~50% to current trading. While this avoids an imminent dilutive secondary
share issuance- the company had been running low of cash- the ‘up to 15%’ in royalties from future sales of early phase
II-stage ARO-HBV is clearly disappointing. The relatively low royalty despite of it having confirmed strong HBsAg knockdown in patients can be explained with the fact that Arrowhead has avoided bearing the full risk of having to show proof-of-concept
of HBV control. This despite of having earlier paraded results obtained with an earlier DPC-based RNAi candidate (ARC-520) as strong evidence that RNAi can achieve such immune control.
While
Arrowhead got punished for playing it safely, it can now focus on commercial home-run
indications with highly validated targets and transition to being a broad platform company with a wholly owned attractive lead candidate in ARO-AAT. Indeed, Arrowhead may emerge as the leading
RNAi company as Alnylam, with a market cap ~8x that of Arrowhead, is still
burdened by late-stage RNAi drugs with suboptimal specificity.
While
humiliating, this serves Alnylam as a good reminder to also value innovation by
the direct competition (note: specificity-enhancing technology now adopted by
Alnylam has been available for a decade and could have been had for peanuts, e.g. from now defunct RNAi
play mdRNA/Nastech). Fittingly,
today long-time archrival Silence Therapeutics issued a press release indicating that Alnylam is
playing hard-ball with regard to Silence-owned IP purportedly covering
ONPATTRO.
My guess is that Alnylam would rather risk an injunction and deprive patients of a very good medicine than to submit to what appear to me legitimate demands of a competitor.
Akcea’s antisense
drug for TTR amyloidosis gets FDA nod
Last
Friday, Akcea’s TTR drug TEGSEDI (licensed from Ionis) finally got FDA marketing approval
for patients suffering from TTR-related polyneuropathy. As expected
from the delay in the approval process, TEGSEDI’s approval is accompanied by hefty
black box warnings highlighting
thrombocytopenia and renal risks of the (non-GalNAc) phosphorothioate oligonucleotide.
Furthermore, the REMS program calls for frequent
blood monitoring, essentially negating the claimed at-your-home convenience advantage
over competing RNAi drug ONPATTRO. Add
to the poor safety profile clear efficacy disadvantages and pricing at parity
with ONPATTRO, ONPATTRO should clearly win out in the marketplace.
Having said
that, the TTR community is relatively small and key opinion leaders with relationships
to a given drug company tend to support the drugs from the same company.
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