As the company unveiled 18-month results from the phase III study called Helios-A, Alnylam Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s president of R&D, Akshay Vaishnaw, said “new exploratory data with the cardiac endpoints are extremely encouraging.” The study is testing RNAi therapy vutrisiran in polyneuropathy associated with hereditary transthyretin-mediated (hATTR) amyloidosis, where Helios-A met all secondary endpoints measured at 18 months.
Optimism for the potential of a bifunctional fusion protein complex in development at HCW Biologics Inc. for the potential treatment of pancreatic cancer jolted company shares (NASDAQ:HCWB) skyward to $4.73 on Oct. 28, up 62%, though still far short of the company's $8 per share summer market debut. The company, founded and led by former Altor Bioscience Corp. CEO Hing Wong, gained FDA clearance to start a first-in-human phase Ib trial of the candidate, HCW-9218.
A phase III trial of Rafael Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s devimistat in pancreatic cancer has failed, sending shares in its publicly listed holding company through the floor. Shares in Rafael Holdings (NYSE:RFL) closed Oct. 28 down 73% to $8.09, for a loss of $22.08 after an independent data monitoring committee also recommended a separate phase III trial of devimistat in acute myeloid leukemia should be stopped due to lack of efficacy.
To help better utilize real-world data in drug development, the EMA published its final guideline Oct. 26 on the use of registry-based studies to support regulatory decision-making.
Shares of Angion Biomedica Corp. tumbled more than 50% Oct. 27 on disappointing top-line data from its phase III study testing ANG-3777’s ability to improve organ function in patients receiving deceased donor kidney transplants. The company’s management, however, remained cautiously optimistic that the safety results and signals of biological activity could bode well for an exploratory phase II study testing the drug in acute kidney injury associated with cardiac surgery involving cardiopulmonary bypass, which is expected to read out later this quarter.
What Cortexyme Inc.’s chief operating officer Christopher Lowe called “a giant step forward” in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) research with atuzaginstat (COR-388) was viewed differently by Wall Street, which walloped shares (NASDAQ:CRTX) by 76%, or $44.17, causing the stock to close at $13.51.