The recent online publication of findings from the University of Southern California ataxia working group called Enigma served to fuel more interest in the simmering drug development space of Friederichs’s ataxia (FRDA), where a handful of gene therapies and other approaches, plus one promising small-molecule treatment, are in the works.
There’s been a change of plans. Following a preliminary review of briefing materials for a type C meeting, the FDA told Reata Pharmaceuticals Inc. that a pre-NDA meeting is instead the next best step in the development of omaveloxolone (RT-408) for treating Friedreich’s ataxia (FA).
Wall Street dinged Reata Pharmaceuticals Inc. earlier this week after mixed regulatory news on the nuclear factor erythroid-2 related factor 2 (NRF2) activators omaveloxolone for Friedreich’s ataxia (FA) and bardoxolone for Alport syndrome (AS), but the Plano, Texas-based firm stayed resolute, and its recent deal with Blackstone Life Sciences (BXLS) provides cause for optimism. Increased clarity on paths forward “debunks the bear-case view” of Reata, in the opinion of Jefferies analyst Maury Raycroft, who went as far as to say in a report that the stock “overreaction create[d] a buying opportunity.”
Reata Pharmaceuticals Inc.'s surprise victory in the pivotal, second part of the phase II study called Moxie with Nrf2 activator omaveloxolone in patients with Friedreich's ataxia (FA) energized Wall Street and sharpened appetites for data due shortly with another candidate in the class, bardoxolone methyl, in the works for Alport syndrome (AS).
Reata Pharmaceuticals Inc. has agreed to pay former partner Abbvie Inc. $330 million plus royalties to reacquire ex-U.S. development, manufacturing and commercialization rights for the Nrf2 activators bardoxolone methyl and omaveloxolone, as well as other next-generation candidates in the class. Rights to certain Asian markets for bardoxolone remain licensed to Kyowa Kirin Co. Ltd.