For Verve Therapeutics Inc., the good news was the first human proof-of-concept data for a single-course in vivo base-editing treatment, presented at the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions over the weekend, showed treatment with VERVE-101 led to promising dose-dependent reductions in low-density lipoprotein cholesterol in patients with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia. The bad news was to be found in the safety data for the 10 patients treated to date, which included a myocardial infarction in one patient deemed potentially related to treatment.
Heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (HeFH) patients treated with lerodalcibep achieved a 58.6% reduction in LDL-cholesterol at week 24 and a 65% reduction at the mean of weeks 22 and 24 in the phase III trial Liberate-HeFH. The developer, Cincinnati-based Lib Therapeutics Inc., was founded in 2015 when it licensed the technology from Bristol Myers Squibb Co. but is just now emerging from stealth.
Verve Therapeutics Inc.’s heart disease candidate, VERVE-101, is the latest gene editing-based therapy to hit a snag at the FDA, which issued a clinical hold, delaying the start of phase I testing in the U.S. News of the hold, which followed preclinical presentations over the weekend at the American Heart Association 2022 meeting, sent shares of Verve (NASDAQ:VERV) falling 30.5% to close Nov. 7 at $21.75.
Innovent Biologics Inc.’s PCSK9 inhibitor, IBI-306, intended for the treatment of heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (HeFH), has met its primary endpoint in a phase III study in Chinese patients.
Less than a month after landing a positive opinion from the EMA's CHMP, Esperion Therapeutics Inc. has won FDA approval for bempedoic acid as an adjunct to diet and maximally tolerated statin therapy.