The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

4D Pharma restarts delayed Crohn’s disease drug trial

Health: Pharma goes back to drawing board after previous tests delayed

- BY ERIKKA ASKELAND

One of Aberdeen’s largest pharmaceut­ical companies has commenced a clinical trial of a new drug for paediatric Crohn’s disease after a prior test was delayed.

4D Pharma, which bases its research facilities at the University of Aberdeen’s Foresterhi­ll Campus, said the first subject of its trial of Thetanix has been “dosed” with the drug, which has been developed from live bacteria.

The move comes after the firm pulled a trial in

“This offers the potential to develop a new class of drugs”

February over “quality concerns” of the drug being tested. 4D Pharma subsequent­ly splashed out £4.8million to buy up pharmaceut­ical grade facilities capable of producing live biotherape­utics in Leon in north-west Spain.

Thetanix is a live biotherape­utic, a new class of regulated drugs using bacteria to treat or cure disease. 4D’s aim of the trial is to prove the safety and “tolerabili­ty” of the drug, while the trial’s 10 subjects will also be assessed to see any effects the treatment has on symptoms of the disease as well as analysis of the test subjects’ “microbiome” – the body’s community of micro-organisms.

The researcher­s at 4D believe that because the treatment is derived from the bacteria of a healthy human subject, Thetanix and 4D’s other live biotherape­utics “bring a new dimension to safety”.

“As the initial source material is from healthy human subjects, live biotherape­utics are expected to have significan­tly reduced (or no) side effects associated with currently approved drugs. This offers the potential to develop a new class of efficaciou­s drugs with vastly improved safety and tolerabili­ty,” it said in a statement.

Current treatments for paediatric Crohn’s disease (PCD), which is thought to affect 41,000 children in the US, targets symptoms inflammati­on of the lining of the digestive tract with corticoste­roids and immunosupp­ressants.

It added: “Whilst these treatments are capable of resolving symptoms, they do not address the underlying cause of the disease. Furthermor­e, long-term use may reduce the response rate over time and is also associated with serious side effects, such as the developmen­t of cancers and deleteriou­s effects on children’s growth and bone health.”

Dr Alex Stevenson, 4D’s chief scientific officer, said the commenceme­nt of the trial was “an important milestone” for the firm. He added: “We continue to consolidat­e our position in this new and emerging field and look forward to reporting on our continuing progress.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? TESTING, TESTING: The Crohn’s drug has been developed from live bacteria
TESTING, TESTING: The Crohn’s drug has been developed from live bacteria
 ??  ?? The research facilities at the University of Aberdeen
The research facilities at the University of Aberdeen

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom