CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Akebia Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ:AKBA), a biopharmaceutical company focused on delivering innovative therapies to patients with kidney disease through the biology of hypoxia inducible factor (HIF), today announces several corporate and clinical developments consistent with its objectives for 2015, including dosing the first patient in its global Phase 3 PRO2TECT™ program in December. This program is evaluating vadadustat (formerly AKB-6548) in non-dialysis patients with anemia related to chronic kidney disease (NDD-CKD). In addition, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently opened Akebia’s Investigational New Drug (IND) application, allowing the company to initiate a Phase 1 clinical study of AKB-6899, an orally-available HIF stabilizer, in oncology. The company also made progress with its intellectual property efforts in Japan for vadadustat.
“We achieved all of our clinical and corporate objectives for 2015, positioning Akebia for continued success with the vadadustat anemia program in chronic kidney disease and further building our pipeline of HIF stabilizers”
“We achieved all of our clinical and corporate objectives for 2015, positioning Akebia for continued success with the vadadustat anemia program in chronic kidney disease and further building our pipeline of HIF stabilizers,” stated John P. Butler, President and Chief Executive Officer of Akebia. “The launch of our global Phase 3 PRO2TECT™ program in non-dialysis patients is a significant milestone in our efforts to establish vadadustat as the best-in-class treatment option for chronic kidney disease patients with anemia. Following positive Phase 2 data for vadadustat in dialysis patients, we are now working with regulators to finalize the design for our INNO2VATE™ global Phase 3 program, which is expected to commence this year.”
Mr. Butler added, “We were also very pleased to have announced a collaboration with Mitsubishi Tanabe, one of the largest and most successful pharmaceutical companies in Japan, for the development and commercialization of vadadustat in Japan and certain other Asian countries. Additionally, the FDA opened an IND for our second HIF stabilizing compound, AKB-6899, and we expect to initiate a Phase 1 study in oncology this year. We look forward to continuing to build on this momentum in 2016 and beyond.”
PRO2TECT™ Program Update
The PRO2TECT™
Phase 3 program includes two separate studies that will collectively
enroll approximately 3,100 NDD-CKD patients across 500 sites globally.
The first patient was recently dosed in the PRO2TECT™
correction study, which is enrolling anemic patients not currently being
treated with recombinant erythropoiesis stimulating agents (rESAs). The
PRO2TECT™ conversion study includes patients currently
receiving rESA who will be converted to either vadadustat or the active
control with the goal of maintaining their baseline hemoglobin levels.
Both studies include a 1:1 randomization and an open label,
active-control, non-inferiority design. Primary endpoints include an
efficacy assessment of the hemoglobin response and cardiovascular safety
as measured by major adverse cardiovascular events. The PRO2TECT™ program
is designed to support registration in major markets worldwide and to
collect the data required to establish a new standard of care for
chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients. The company expects to complete
enrollment in late 2017.
“The PRO2TECT™ Phase 3 program builds on our robust Phase 2 program in NDD-CKD patients, which found that once-daily vadadustat maintained hemoglobin levels in a clinically relevant range while minimizing fluctuations in hemoglobin levels that are associated with increased cardiovascular safety risks," stated Brad Maroni, M.D., Chief Medical Officer at Akebia. "These studies are designed to establish the safety and efficacy of vadadustat in the setting of contemporary clinical practice, and to support regulatory approvals globally."
AKB-6899 Update
The company’s second clinical candidate,
AKB-6899, is designed as a small molecule HIF stabilizer with potential
therapeutic benefit in oncology and ophthalmology. In in vitro
studies, AKB-6899 reduced VEGF levels in the presence of hypoxia, and
therefore has the potential to reduce VEGF in tumor cells specifically.
In several preclinical models, AKB-6899 reduced tumor growth and the
development of metastases. Therefore, Akebia opened an IND with the FDA
at the end of 2015 and expect to commence clinical development of
AKB-6899 in 2016.
Intellectual Property Update
Akebia is pleased to provide an
update on its challenge to Japanese Patent No. 4804131 (the ’131
patent), which is owned by FibroGen. On June 2, 2014, Akebia filed an
invalidity proceeding in the Japanese Patent Office (JPO) challenging
the validity of the ’131 patent, requesting that it be revoked in its
entirety. In a preliminary decision dated May 11, 2015, the JPO found
all of the challenged claims to be invalid. In response, FibroGen filed
a request for correction in which it requested that the ’131 patent
claims be amended to exclude pyridine carboxamides from their scope. On
November 18, 2015, Akebia received the final trial decision from the JPO
in which it accepted FibroGen’s requested claim amendments. As a result
of the JPO’s decision and FibroGen’s subsequent amendments, the FibroGen
’131 patent does not cover vadadustat or any pyridine carboxamide
compounds.
About Vadadustat
Vadadustat is an oral therapy currently in
development for the treatment of anemia related to CKD. Vadadustat is
designed to stabilize HIF, a transcription factor that regulates the
expression of genes involved with red blood cell (RBC) production in
response to changes in oxygen levels, by inhibiting the HIF
prolyl-hydroxylase enzyme. Vadadustat exploits the same mechanism of
action used by the body to naturally adapt to lower oxygen availability
associated with a moderate increase in altitude. The body responds to
lower oxygen availability with increased production of HIF, which
coordinates the interdependent processes of iron mobilization and
erythropoietin (EPO) production to increase RBC production and,
ultimately, improve oxygen delivery.
As a HIF stabilizer with best-in-class potential, vadadustat raises hemoglobin levels predictably and sustainably, with a dosing regimen that allows for a gradual and controlled titration. Vadadustat has been shown to improve iron mobilization, potentially reducing the need for iron supplementation.
About Anemia Related to CKD
Approximately 30 million people
in the United States have CKD, with an estimated 1.8 million of these
patients suffering from anemia. Anemia results from the body's inability
to coordinate RBC production in response to lower oxygen levels due to
the progressive loss of kidney function, which occurs in patients with
CKD. Left untreated, anemia significantly accelerates patients' overall
deterioration of health with increased morbidity and mortality. Renal
anemia is currently treated with injectable rESAs, which are associated
with inconsistent hemoglobin responses and well-documented safety risks.
About Akebia Therapeutics
Akebia Therapeutics, Inc. is a
biopharmaceutical company headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
focused on delivering innovative therapies to patients with kidney
disease through HIF biology. The company has completed Phase 2
development of its lead product candidate, vadadustat, an oral therapy
for the treatment of anemia related to CKD in both non-dialysis and
dialysis patients. Enrollment in the PRO2TECT™ Phase 3
program in non-dialysis CKD patients commenced in late 2015 and the INNO2VATETM
Phase 3 program in dialysis-dependent CKD patients is expected to
commence in 2016.
Forward-Looking Statements
This press release
includes forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements
include those about Akebia Therapeutics, Inc.’s strategy, future plans
and prospects, including statements regarding the potential indications,
dosing and benefits of vadadustat, the development plans for vadadustat
and AKB-6899, the initiation of the vadadustat Phase 3 program, and the
commencement of clinical development for AKB-6899. The words
"anticipate," "appear," "believe," "estimate," "expect," "intend,"
"may," "plan," "predict," "project," "target," "potential," "will,"
"would," "could," "should," "continue," and similar expressions are
intended to identify forward-looking statements, although not all
forward-looking statements contain these identifying words. Each
forward-looking statement is subject to risks and uncertainties that
could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or
implied in such statement, including the risk that existing preclinical
and clinical data may not be predictive of the results of ongoing or
later clinical studies; the ability of Akebia to successfully complete
the clinical development of vadadustat; the funding required to develop
Akebia's product candidates and operate the company, and the actual
expenses associated therewith; the cost of the Phase 1 study of AKB-6899
and the Phase 3 studies of vadadustat and the availability of financing
to cover such costs; the timing and content of decisions made by the FDA
and other regulatory authorities; the actual time it takes to prepare
for and initiate clinical studies; the success of competitors in
developing product candidates for diseases for which Akebia is currently
developing its product candidates; and Akebia's ability to obtain,
maintain and enforce patent and other intellectual property protection
for vadadustat and AKB-6899. Other risks and uncertainties include those
identified under the heading "Risk Factors" in Akebia's Quarterly Report
on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2015, and other filings
that Akebia may make with the Securities and Exchange Commission in the
future. Akebia does not undertake, and specifically disclaims, any
obligation to update any forward-looking statements contained in this
press release.
Akebia
Investors:
Ed Joyce, 617-844-6130
ejoyce@akebia.com
or
Media:
Eliza
Schleifstein, 917-763-8106
Eliza@argotpartners.com