Leuven (BELGIUM) - January 31st, 2017, 07:00h CET - TiGenix NV (Euronext Brussels and Nasdaq: TIG), an advanced biopharmaceutical company focused on developing and commercializing novel therapeutics from its proprietary platforms of allogeneic expanded stem cells, today announced that the first patient has been enrolled and treated in its Phase Ib/IIa clinical trial for Cx611 (SEPCELL) in the treatment of severe sepsis in community-acquired pneumonia (CAP).
Cx611 is an intravenously-administered product of allogeneic expanded adipose-derived stem cells (eASCs), which are known for their broad range of immunomodulatory properties. The SEPCELL trial focuses on patients with severe community-acquired bacterial pneumonia (or life threatening pneumonia acquired outside a hospital setting), admitted to intensive care units due to severe sepsis, requiring mechanical ventilation and/or vasopressors. This study is a multicenter, international clinical trial to evaluate Cx611 safety profile at 90 days, the reduction in the duration of mechanical ventilation and/or vasopressors, as well as the overall survival rate, clinical cure, and other efficacy-related endpoints. Enrolled patients will receive one dose of either Cx611 or placebo on days one and three - total two doses - in addition to the standard of care.
Sepsis is a life-threatening condition that arises when the body’s response to an infection injures its own tissues and organs. Sepsis affects over 26 million people worldwide, each year, and has a mortality rate of up to forty percent. This condition clearly represents a major unmet medical need and a huge social burden. In western countries sepsis is still the leading cause of death, representing exorbitant in-patient costs of approximately 24 billion US dollars each year, and growing. Patients suffering from severe sepsis display a much higher level and persistence of inflammation. Cx611, given its multi-dimensional immunomodulatory properties, may have the potential to modulate and restore the deregulated immune response in patients with severe community-acquired pneumonia.
“Patients suffering from severe sepsis are in need of new therapies; however the development of new drugs has proven to be difficult due to the variety of patient profiles. We have built on lessons learned from past experiences and designed the SEPCELL trial with strict inclusion and exclusion criteria, within a very specific patient population therefore addressing one of the major pitfalls of previous clinical trials in this indication,” said Professor Pierre-François Laterre, principal investigator within the SEPCELL project, and Chief of the Intensive Care Service at Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc, Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium.
“Cx611, with its immunomodulatory action, represents a novel approach to address severe sepsis. The SEPCELL trial will provide valuable information on the safety, tolerability and efficacy of Cx611 as a candidate for the treatment of patients with severe sepsis,” said Dr. Marie Paule Richard, Chief Medical Officer of TiGenix.
Along with TiGenix, the SEPCELL project is represented by a group of five European research institutes that bring together the necessary competencies, expertise and resources to achieve the project’s goals. SEPCELL has been awarded a EUR 5.4 million grant by the European Union under the Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under Grant Agreement 681031. For more information about sepsis, the SEPCELL project, objectives and funding, please consult this link: http://www.sepcell.eu