Vaccinex Reports Positive Data for SIGNAL-AD Phase 1b/2 Trial of Pepinemab in Alzheimer’s Disease
Vaccinex, Inc. recently announced positive results of its early stage SIGNAL-AD clinical trial of pepinemab antibody in AD. Topline results were presented by Eric Siemers, MD, Principal Investigator of the SIGNAL-AD trial, at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference in Philadelphia.
The clinical trial met its designated primary endpoint of safety by indicating that pepinemab is well-tolerated by patients with AD. No Serious Treatment Emergent Adverse Events (TEAE) Related to Treatment were reported by investigators at any of the 16 clinical sites that participated in this study. The only TEAE leading to discontinuation in the entire trial was in the placebo group. Vaccinex had previously reported that pepinemab (VX15/2503) was well-tolerated by patients with Huntington’s disease (HD) and multiple sclerosis (MS).
An important secondary endpoint of the study was to determine whether pepinemab prevents decline in brain metabolic activity consistent with blocking astrocyte reactivity as evidenced by an increase in FDG-PET imaging signal in a major brain region known to be affected by disease progression. This was determined over the course of 12-months treatment with pepinemab relative to placebo. We report that pepinemab treatment resulted in a statistically significant increase (p=0.0297) in FDG-PET signal in the medial temporal cortex of patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) due to AD. The medial temporal region of brain includes hippocampus and entorhinal cortex known to be affected during early disease progression in many patients with MCI. A similar significant result of pepinemab treatment on brain metabolic activity was previously shown in our Phase 2 study of HD which we believe highlights mechanistic similarities in the pathology of these two neurodegenerative diseases.
Although the present study was not sufficiently powered to detect cognitive effects or changes in some additional secondary endpoints with statistical significance, we previously reported that, in a larger study that enrolled approximately 90 HD patients/arm with early symptoms of cognitive deficits, seemingly similar to MCI in AD, pepinemab treatment improved performance on key cognitive and psychological measures.
“We believe that results of the SIGNAL-AD study demonstrate that pepinemab has a similar effect in Alzheimer’s to those we previously described for a key outcome in Huntington’s disease, preventing the characteristic disease-related decline of brain metabolic activity in a brain region known to be affected early in disease progression,” said the Company’s CEO, Maurice Zauderer, PhD. This positive data release suggests that pepinemab has the potential to benefit patients with MCI due to AD. AD and HD share important pathological features and clinical symptoms, and we believe our approach of confirming similar treatment effects of pepinemab in these two different neurodegenerative diseases is strongly supportive of pepinemab as a potentially well-tolerated and effective treatment for both Alzheimer’s and Huntington’s disease.”
“Our study indicates that pepinemab may be most effective in patients with very early stage symptoms, eg, Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) due to AD, but not subsequent dementia,” Dr. Zauderer added. “This suggests that a promising treatment strategy would be to identify people with MCI as early as possible and to treat with pepinemab to keep them from progressing for as long as possible. We believe that, to date, no disease modifying therapy has been shown to be effective in later stages of AD dementia. Perhaps for AD, as for cancer, if you wait, new pathologies come into play and drugs that may have been helpful earlier become less effective.”
The Alzheimer’s Association estimates that 12% to 18% of people aged 60 or older are living with MCI due to AD and that about one-third of these patients will develop dementia within five years. A drug that can slow progression of MCI could significantly extend a rewarding and productive life for people at risk.
Pepinemab has been well-tolerated in clinical trials that enrolled a total of more than 600 patients primarily in neurological indications, AD, HD, and MS. Current concerns about the limitations of treatment with approved anti-Aβ amyloid antibodies such as Leqembi (Eisai and Biogen) and Kisunla (Eli Lilly) might make pepinemab, if approved, attractive as either an alternative for patients at high risk for adverse events related to treatment with Leqembi or Kisunla, or as a complementary treatment that might enhance the benefit to patients of treatment with such anti-Aβ antibodies.
The SIGNAL-AD study was funded in part by a grant from the Alzheimer’s Association as well as by investments from the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation (ADDF).
Vaccinex is actively exploring the potential for continuing late stage development in AD together with a major pharmaceutical partner.
The NCT04381468, or SIGNAL-AD, trial is a Phase 1b/2, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, multicenter study of pepinemab in 50 patients who have MCI due to AD or early Alzheimer’s dementia, with amyloid positive status and CDR-GS of 0.5-1 and MMSE 17-26. The study’s primary endpoint related to safety and tolerability; secondary endpoint includes assessment of brain metabolic activity determined by FDG-PET. Patients received pepinemab (40 mg/kg) randomized 1:1 to placebo, every four weeks for 12 intravenous infusions. Prior clinical results of pepinemab treatment for Huntington’s disease indicate that pepinemab may be capable of preventing decline in brain metabolic activity consistent with blocking astrocyte reactivity and associated with apparent improvements in cognition (NCT02481674). Results of the Phase 2 NCT02481674 trial were published in Nature Medicine, December 2022.
Pepinemab is a humanized IgG4 monoclonal antibody designed to block SEMA4D, which can otherwise bind to plexin-B1 receptors to trigger collapse of the actin cytoskeleton in cells and lead to loss of homeostatic functions of astrocytes and other glial cells in the brain and of dendritic cells in immune tissue. Pepinemab appears to have been well-tolerated with a favorable safety profile in multiple clinical trials in different neurological and cancer indications.
Vaccinex, Inc. is pioneering a differentiated approach to treating slowly progressive neurodegenerative diseases and cancer through the inhibition of semaphorin 4D (SEMA4D). The company’s lead drug candidate, pepinemab, blocks SEMA4D, a potent biological effector that it believes triggers damaging inflammation in chronic diseases of the brain and prevents infiltration and activation of immune cells in tumors. Pepinemab was studied as a monotherapy in the Phase 1b/2 SIGNAL-AD study in Alzheimer’s Disease, and the company has previously published promising Phase 2 data in Huntington’s disease. Vaccinex believes pepinemab could also be an important contributor to combination therapy in AD. In oncology, pepinemab is being evaluated in combination with KEYTRUDA in the Phase 1b/2 KEYNOTE-B84 study in recurrent or metastatic head and neck cancer (HNSCC) and in combination with BAVENCIO in a Phase 1b/2 study in patients with metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PDAC). The oncology clinical program also includes several investigator-sponsored studies in solid tumors including breast cancer and melanoma.
Vaccinex has global commercial and development rights to pepinemab and is the sponsor of the KEYNOTE-B84 study which is being performed in collaboration with Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp, a subsidiary of Merck and Co, Inc. Kenilworth, NJ.
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