Day two of the J.P Morgan Healthcare Conference rolled on with positive data from Sling Therapeutics Inc. that is leading the company to a phase III study in treating thyroid eye disease. The privately held company posted top-line efficacy and safety results from a phase IIb/III study of its lead candidate, linsitinib, which hits its primary endpoint with statistical significance at the twice-daily, 150-mg oral dose.
Implications for Amgen Inc.’s same-class Tepezza (teprotumumab) of positive phase III data from Viridian Therapeutics Inc. with veligrotug in thyroid eye disease became a topic of talk on Wall Street talk. “I’m not drawing any clinical trial comparisons, you’ll have to reach your own conclusions,” CEO Steve Mahoney said during a conference call on the results.
With favorable data from the phase III trial testing izokibep, a small protein therapeutic designed to inhibit IL-17A, in hidradenitis suppurativa (HS), Acelyrin Inc. CEO Mina Kim said the firm will “look at all the options and do what’s best for the program.” The phase III trial hit its primary endpoint of Hidradenitis Suppurativa Clinical Response 75 at 12 weeks. At the same time, the Los Angeles-based firm made known a refocused pipeline strategy that prioritizes lonigutamab in thyroid eye disease (TED) and is projected to extend its cash runway.
In a crowded thyroid eye disease (TED) space, Innovent Biologics Inc. reported positive late-stage findings for its TED therapy, IBI-311, spurring the Suzhou, China-based biopharma to file for regulatory approval in China.
Kriya Therapeutics Inc.’s unveiling of its new gene therapy program for thyroid eye disease (TED), KRIYA-586, added yet another player to the burgeoning space, where a handful of developers have reached the phase III stage.
Kriya Therapeutics Inc. has announced its gene therapy program for thyroid eye disease (TED), KRIYA-586. It is designed to be a one-time, adeno-associated virus (AAV) gene therapy that drives durable expression of a monoclonal antibody blocking the insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor (IGF-1R).
As investors continue to weigh VRDN-001’s chances against Tepezza (teprotumumab, Horizon Pharmaceuticals plc) in thyroid eye disease, Viridian Therapeutics Inc. popped the lid off positive preliminary data from the ongoing phase I/II trial with the intravenous full antagonist antibody to the insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor.
Less than two years old, Tourmaline Bio Inc. is gaining a public listing through a reverse merger with publicly traded Talaris Therapeutics Inc., as it enters a phase IIb with its lead IL-6 inhibitor for thyroid eye disease (TED).