Iveric Bio Expands into Gene Therapy for Untreated Retinal Diseases – BioSpace

Posted: June 6, 2021 at 1:49 am

When Iveric Bio established its gene therapy advisory committee recently, the move signaled the opening of a second front in its mission to treat retinal diseases for which there are no treatments.

Retinal medicine is an extremely nuanced field, so we needed the best of the best scientists and clinicians out there, said Pravin U. Dugel, M.D., president of Iveric Bio. We established the committee once the basic science matured. Now were at the precipice of putting retinal gene therapy into humans.

The mission of the Gene Therapy Inherited Retina Disease Scientific Advisory Committee is to translate the science to the clinic.

A lot of companies miss the translation aspect. Just because the science is valid in the lab and in pre-clinical studies, doesnt necessarily mean it will be adapted to the clinic, Dugel told BioSpace.

The committees insights also will help us prioritize our pipeline and design clinical trials to be more impactful, he added. For example, determining clinical impact isnt as simple as checking vision. The visual acuity, which is a measure only of the central retina, may not improve in first-in-human studies and may not be the appropriate biomarker for some diseases.

Instead, better trial endpoints may be multi-luminance mobility testing, microperimetry, quality of life questionnaires, etc., depending on the target disease. Choosing the appropriate biomarkers, such as reading speed, contrast sensitivity, or other elements would offer meaningful improvements to people who are going blind. Also, the factors that are meaningful to an 85-year-old patient may be different than those of a 14-year-old, he pointed out.

Iveric Bio was founded by retinal specialists. Before joining Iveric Bio 18 months ago and recently becoming president of the company, Dugel himself was a practicing retinal specialist and remains an internationally known physician.

He is a clinical professor at the USC Roski Eye Institute, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California; has served as a visiting professor in some 16 nations; and has been the principal investigator in more than 100 multicenter trials. He received the Senior Honor Award from the American Academy of Ophthalmology and has served as a board member for the largest retina society in the United States, the American Society of Retina Specialists (ASRS), and the largest retina society in Europe, EURETINA.

In selecting the gene therapy advisory committee, therefore, we werent starting from scratch. The retinal world is small. There are only 2,500 retinal specialists in the U.S., and everybody knows everybody. They each have a certain niche, he said.

Dugel has worked with many of these committee members before joining the company and has known many throughout his professional life. This collegiality is expected to enhance Iveric Bios gene therapy program.

Members of the new Gene Therapy Inherited Retina Disease Scientific Advisory Committee are:

The gene therapy program on which they are advising currently has five different products, all in the pre-clinical and research phases. The furthest along are IC-100 for RHO-adRP and IC-200 for best1-related retinal diseases. For IC-200, a Phase I/II trial is planned for the second half of this year.

The remaining programs are miniCEP290 for Lebers congential amaurosis type 10; miniABDA4 for autosomal recessive Stargardt disease; and miniUSH2A for Ushers syndrome Type 2A. They are dubbed mini-gene programs because, in these programs, the naturally occurring gene is larger than the capacity of the standard adeno-associated viral (AAV) vector used for gene therapy. Iveric Bio, therefore, is working to develop smaller gene constructs to enable AAV gene delivery.

The company also has two therapeutic product candidates in development. One, Zimura (avacincaptad pegol), is in development for the treatment of geographic atrophy secondary to macular degeneration.

Zimura currently is being studied in a Phase III clinical program, and if results at 12 months are positive, we plan to submit Zimura to the FDA for final approval in this indication, Dugel said.

Zimura also is in a Phase IIb clinical trial to treat autosomal recessive Stargardt disease.

The other product candidate, IC 500, is an HtrA1 inhibitor. It is designed to stop the progression of macular degeneration and is in preclinical development.

When I entered this field, about 30 years ago, treatments for retinal diseases were almost entirely surgical. We couldnt do anything for macular degeneration or most inherited diseases. We could repair retinal detachments, but were unable to treat most of the medical problems we encountered, Dugel recalled. Since then, theres been astonishing progress in this field.

Many of the advances have been in wet macular degeneration.

Were not doing that. We are focusing on diseases for which there is no treatment, Dugel told BioSpace. Retinal conditions with unmet needs are not necessarily rare, either. The biggest cause of blindness is dry macular degeneration, yet theres no treatment for that.

Hes hoping Zimura will solve that.

These two silos, therapeutics and gene therapy, will help Iveric Bio expand its footprint in the retinal arena. The ultimate goal is to uphold Iveric Bios mission statement: to develop transformative therapies for retinal diseases.

Go here to see the original:
Iveric Bio Expands into Gene Therapy for Untreated Retinal Diseases - BioSpace

Related Posts