Pratteln,
The 48-week Phase 2b VISION-DMD study (VBP15-004; clinicaltrials.gov: NCT03439670 [1]) is designed as a pivotal trial to demonstrate efficacy and safety of vamorolone administered orally at doses of 2.0 mg/kg/day and 6.0 mg/kg/day versus prednisone 0.75 mg/kg/day and placebo in ambulant boys ages 4 to <7 years with DMD. Efficacy outcome measures after the first 24-week treatment period are muscle strength and motor function outcomes with Time to Stand test (TTSTAND) as the primary study endpoint. Additional analyses compare various safety and tolerability markers between the vamorolone dose groups, placebo and prednisone. The second 24-week treatment period where all patients receive one of two vamorolone doses will evaluate the persistence of effect in the longer term. In addition to efficacy, the study aims to confirm the favorable tolerability profile of vamorolone with the potential to offer an alternative to current standard of care. Although glucocorticoids are part of the current care recommendations for DMD, their adverse effect profile limits their use.
With the current number of 121 patients recruited, the VISION-DMD study has reached its pre-planned enrollment target. The last patient is expected to complete the first 24-week treatment period in the first quarter of 2021 with a topline data readout in the second quarter of 2021. Subject to positive results of this first 24-week treatment period, this would pave the way for a regulatory submission to the
Vamorolone has been granted Orphan Drug status in the US and in
“We are very pleased having achieved full enrollment of our pivotal trial with vamorolone in patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy,” said
“We congratulate ReveraGen on this accomplishment of fully enrolling the VISION-DMD trial, in times where the conduct of any clinical trial is very challenging for patients and families, study sites and study personnel,” said
About Vamorolone
Vamorolone is a first-in-class drug candidate that binds to the same receptors as corticosteroids but modifies the downstream activity of the receptors [3, 4]. This has the potential to ‘dissociate’ efficacy from typical steroid safety concerns and therefore could emerge as a valuable alternative to existing corticosteroids, the current standard of care in children and adolescent patients with DMD. There is significant unmet medical need in this patient group as high dose corticosteroids have significant systemic side effects that detract from patient quality of life. Vamorolone is being developed by US-based
About the clinical development program of Vamorolone in patients with DMD
The clinical development program with vamorolone in patients with DMD was initiated following a clinical pharmacology study (VBP15-001) in healthy volunteers in which biomarker assessments indicated reduced occurrence of side effects typical for traditional corticosteroid drugs like bone fragility, metabolic disturbance, immune suppression [5].
The Phase 2a program with vamorolone consisted of two studies that were conducted back-to-back in 48 boys with DMD aged 4 to <7 years (VBP15-002 and VBP15-003). These studies with a combined duration of 6 months investigated the efficacy, safety and tolerability of oral administration of vamorolone at doses of 0.25, 0.75, 2.0 and 6.0 mg/kg/day (12 boys per treatment group). Data from these studies reported that vamorolone was safe and well tolerated over a period of 6 months with dose- and time-related improvements in various timed function tests and motor function outcomes [6, 7]. Vamorolone treatment led to increased serum levels of osteocalcin, a biomarker of bone formation, suggesting possible reduction of bone morbidities typically associated with corticosteroids. Biomarker outcomes for adrenal suppression and insulin resistance also indicated better tolerability of vamorolone treatment, relative to published studies of corticosteroid therapy.
All 46 patients who completed the VBP15-003 study requested to continue vamorolone treatment in the long-term extension, rather than transition to corticosteroids. This 24-month long-term open-label extension study (VBP15-LTE) study enabled dose escalation and de-escalation at the preference of the physician and family and the majority of physicians/families chose treatment at the highest tested dose of vamorolone by the end of the VBP15-LTE study.
The now fully enrolled, Phase 2b VISION-DMD trial (VBP15-004) complements previously conducted clinical studies in DMD. The study is currently being conducted at over 30 sites across
References:
[1] https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03439670?term=vamorolone&draw=2&rank=3
[2] Press release “Santhera Exercises Option to Obtain Worldwide Rights to Vamorolone in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy and All Other Indications”,
[3] Heier CR at al. (2013). VBP15, a novel anti‐inflammatory and membrane‐stabilizer, improves muscular dystrophy without side effects. EMBO Mol Med 5: 1569–1585.
[4] Heier CR et al. (2019). Vamorolone targets dual nuclear receptors to treat inflammation and dystrophic cardiomyopathy. Life Science Alliance DOI 10.26508/lsa.201800186.
[5] Hoffman EP et al. (2018). Phase 1 trial of vamorolone, a first-in-class steroid, shows improvements in side effects via biomarkers bridged to clinical outcomes. Steroids 134: 43-52.
[6] Conklin LS et al. (2018). Phase IIa trial in Duchenne muscular dystrophy shows vamorolone is a first in-class dissociative steroidal anti-inflammatory drug.
[7] Hoffman EP et al. (2019). Vamorolone trial in Duchenne muscular dystrophy shows dose-related improvement of muscle function. Neurology 93: e1312-e1323.
About ReveraGen BioPharma
ReveraGen was founded in 2008 to develop first-in-class dissociative steroidal drugs for Duchenne muscular dystrophy and other chronic inflammatory disorders. The development of ReveraGen’s lead compound, vamorolone, has also been supported through partnerships with foundations worldwide, including
About Santhera
Puldysa® and Raxone® are trademarks of
For further information please contact:
Santhera
public-relations@santhera.com or
Phone: +41 79 875 27 80
eva.kalias@santhera.com
ReveraGen BioPharma
Phone: + 1 240-672-0295
eric.hoffman@reveragen.com
Disclaimer / Forward-looking statements
This communication does not constitute an offer or invitation to subscribe for or purchase any securities of
# # #
Attachment
- 2020-09-11_VISION-DMD-FullEnrollment_e_final
Source:
2020 GlobeNewswire, Inc., source