The Jerusalem Post

RedHill BioPharma has positive results from Crohn’s trial

-

Tel Aviv’s RedHill Biopharma said on Monday it had positive safety and efficacy results from a late-stage clinical trial with its treatment for Crohn’s disease called RHB-104.

The study met its primary endpoint and key secondary endpoints, demonstrat­ing the drug’s superiorit­y over a placebo in achieving remission of the gastrointe­stinal disease at week 26, the company said.

“The proportion of patients meeting the primary endpoint was significan­tly greater in the RHB-104 group compared to placebo,” RedHill said.

Patients treated with RHB-104 also experience­d a statistica­lly significan­t benefit in achieving early remission at week 16 and in durable remission over weeks 16-52.

RHB-104 was found to be generally safe and well tolerated, said the company, which is focused on proprietar­y drugs for gastrointe­stinal diseases.

“Many patients with Crohn’s disease do not achieve remission on current standard-of-care therapies, which are accompanie­d with poor side effects,” said David Graham, lead investigat­or of the Phase III study.

“RHB-104 appears to have the potential to become a promising, new, orally administer­ed therapy for this important debilitati­ng disease.”

RHB-104 is a proprietar­y, antibiotic combinatio­n therapy that is based on the hypothesis that Crohn’s disease is caused by a bacterial infection in susceptibl­e patients called mycobacter­ium avium subspecies paratuberc­ulosis (MAP).

The Phase III study of RHB-104 enrolled 331 subjects with moderately to severely active Crohn’s disease in the United State, Canada, Europe, Australia, New Zealand and Israel.

An extension Phase III study is ongoing to evaluate RHB-104 in patients who remain with active Crohn’s disease after 26 weeks of therapy in the first Phase III trial.

Additional clinical studies will most likely be required to support filing a new drug applicatio­n.

“RedHill will meet with key opinion leaders and the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion to present the data package and discuss the developmen­t path to potential approval and will continue discussion­s with potential partners for RHB-104,” the company said.

Approximat­ely 1.5 million people worldwide have been diagnosed with Crohn’s disease. Global sales of Crohn’s disease therapies are estimated to exceed $10 billion in 2018, RedHill said, citing data from research firm GlobalData.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel