Stockholm, Sweden, July 17, 2024. Egetis Therapeutics AB (publ) (“Egetis” or the “Company”) (Nasdaq Stockholm: EGTX), today announced that the European Thyroid Association (ETA) has published new guidelines recommending the use of tiratricol (TRIAC or Emcitate®) as long-term therapy for all patients with MCT8 deficiency, and for certain patients with Resistance to Thyroid Hormone (RTH)-beta, as further outlined in the guidelines.

There are currently no approved treatments for MCT8 deficiency or RTH-beta. Egetis has obtained orphan drug designation for tiratricol for the treatment of MCT8 deficiency and RTH-beta in the EU and the USA, and has submitted a marketing authorisation application in the EU, which is currently under review by the European Medicines Agency.

These inaugural 2024 European Thyroid Association Guidelines on diagnosis and management of genetic disorders of thyroid hormone transport, metabolism and action were commissioned by the Executive Committee of the ETA and developed by an independent team of experts. The guidelines can be accessed here:

https://etj.bioscientifica.com/view/journals/etj/aop/etj-24-0125/etj-24-0125.xml

Nicklas Westerholm, CEO, Egetis Therapeutics, commented: “MCT8 deficiency is a detrimental condition with significant unmet medical need. It’s really encouraging to note that the European Thyroid Association recommends tiratricol (Emcitate®) as long-term therapy for all patients with MCT8 deficiency. Our Marketing Authorisation Application in the EU for tiratricol for the treatment of MCT8 deficiency was submitted in October 2023 and we look forward to providing the first potential approved treatment for patients with MCT8 deficiency.”

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