Highlights:
- Statistically significant improvement from baseline assessed by both clinicians and caregivers in all four efficacy measures specifically designed for
Pitt Hopkins syndrome (Wilcoxon signed rank test p<0.05) - Clinician and caregiver global efficacy measures showed a level of improvement considered clinically meaningful:
– Clinical Global Impression of Improvement (CGI-I) – mean score of 2.6, with 9 out of 11 children showing improvement assessed by clinicians
– Caregiver Overall Impression of Change (CIC) “ mean score of 3.0, with 8 out of 11 children showing improvement assessed by caregivers
- Improvements were seen in clinically important aspects of
Pitt Hopkins syndrome, including communication, social interaction, cognition and motor abilities - NNZ-2591 was safe and well tolerated, with no serious or severe adverse events and no meaningful trends in laboratory values or other safety parameters during treatment
- Second positive Phase 2 trial result further strengthens confidence in NNZ-2591’s potential relevance for multiple neurodevelopmental disorders
Neuren CEO
Dr.
Study design
The open label Phase 2 trial in 16 children aged 3 to 17 years (mean age 9 years) at five hospitals in
The primary endpoints of this first trial in children with PTHS were safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics. Secondary endpoints included four efficacy measures specifically designed for PTHS assessed by clinicians and by caregivers, as well as ten efficacy measures that were not designed for use in PTHS but have been used in other neurodevelopmental conditions.
Safety and tolerability
NNZ-2591 was well tolerated and demonstrated a good safety profile. All Treatment Emergent Adverse Events (TEAEs) were mild to moderate and most were considered not related to study drug. There were no Serious TEAEs and no meaningful trends in laboratory values, electrocardiogram (ECG) or other safety parameters were observed during treatment.
11 subjects completed the trial. One subject discontinued because they were unable to complete the safety monitoring procedures required by the study protocol. Four subjects discontinued due to TEAEs, all of which resolved. For two of those subjects the TEAEs (COVID-19 and mild vomiting/diarrhea/lethargy) were considered not related to study drug and for two subjects the TEAEs (moderate constipation/self-injury/abdominal distention/fatigue and mild sleep disorder/constipation) were considered related to study drug.
Efficacy
The mean improvement from baseline was statistically significant (Wilcoxon signed rank test p<0.05) for each of the four efficacy measures that were specifically designed for
Changes from baseline were not statistically significant for the efficacy measures that were not designed for use in PTHS but have been used in other neurodevelopmental conditions.
Results for efficacy measures specifically designed for
The results for the global measures rated by both clinicians and caregivers showed a level of improvement considered clinically meaningful. 9 out of 11 children that completed the trial showed improvement measured by the PTHS Clinical Global Impression of Improvement (CGI-I), an assessment by the clinician of the child’s overall status compared with baseline. The mean CGI-I score was 2.6. Five children received a score of either 1 (“very much improved”) or 2 (“much improved”).
8 out of 11 children that completed the trial showed improvement measured by the PTHS Caregiver Overall Impression of Change (CIC), an assessment by the caregiver of the child’s overall status compared with baseline. The mean CIC score was 3.0. Four children received a score of 2 (“much improved”).
6 out of 11 children that completed the trial showed improvement measured by the PTHS Clinical Global Impression of Severity (CGI-S), an assessment by the clinician of the child’s overall severity of illness, compared with the assessment at baseline. The CGI-S score improved from 6 to 5 for 3 children and from 5 to 4 for 3 children.
8 out of 11 children that completed the trial showed improvement measured by the Caregiver Top 3 Concerns overall score, an individualised assessment by the caregiver of their child’s most concerning symptoms. Language/Communication was the most commonly chosen concern.
Detailed results are available in the full announcement and investor presentation:
https://announcements.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20240527/pdf/063ysycd36ykzt.pdf
https://announcements.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20240527/pdf/063ytmj3st1zr6.pdf
About
About Neuren
Neuren is developing new drug therapies to treat multiple serious neurological disorders that emerge in early childhood and have no or limited approved treatment options. Recognising the urgent unmet need, all programs have been granted “orphan drug” designation in
DAYBUE™ (trofinetide) is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of Rett syndrome in adult and pediatric patients two years of age and older. Neuren has granted an exclusive worldwide licence to Acadia Pharmaceuticals Inc. for the development and commercialisation of trofinetide.
Neuren’s second drug candidate, NNZ-2591, is in Phase 2 development for multiple neurodevelopmental disorders, with positive results achieved in Phase 2 clinical trials in Phelan-McDermid syndrome and
ASX Listing Rules information
This announcement was authorized to be given to the ASX by the board of directors of Neuren Pharmaceuticals Limited, Suite 201,
Forward-looking Statements
This announcement contains forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Such statements involve known and unknown risks and important factors that may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of Neuren to be materially different from the statements in this announcement.
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