Frexalimab new phase 2 data showed reduction of key biomarker of nerve cell damage in relapsing MS
Paris, June 28, 2024. Sanofi’s CD40L monoclonal antibody, frexalimab, reduced a key biomarker associated with multiple sclerosis nerve cell damage in patients with relapsing MS, supporting the rationale for this novel mechanism in MS phase 3 studies aiming to delay disability progression. New phase 2 results showed significant reduction in plasma levels of neurofilament light chain (NfL) after one year of treatment, a biomarker of nerve cell damage that is typically elevated in people living with MS. These data were presented at the 10th Congress of the European Academy of Neurology (EAN) in Helsinki, Finland.
Patrick Vermersch, MD, PhD
University of Lille, CHU Lille, France
“As our science and diagnostic tools have evolved, so has our understanding of multiple sclerosis. We now know that NfL levels may be related to both acute inflammatory damage and chronic diffuse neuronal loss leading to disability progression, strengthening its position as a key biomarker of nerve cell damage in people with multiple sclerosis. These data presented at EAN suggest that CD40L inhibition may reduce nerve cell damage in people with multiple sclerosis and reinforce the potential of frexalimab to slow or halt disease progression for people living with this disease.”
Erik Wallström, MD, PhD
Global Head of Neurology Development, Sanofi
“People with multiple sclerosis need new high-efficacy treatment options that target disability progression, which remains an unmet need. These results, alongside the previously reported phase 2 efficacy and safety results, further show that frexalimab’s novel mechanism of action has the potential to deliver meaningful improvements for people living with this chronic and debilitating disease.”
Ninety-seven percent (125/129) of the study participants from the initial 12-week double-blind period entered the open-label extension (OLE) of the phase 2 study, and 87% (112/129) remained in the study by the 48-week cut-off. During the OLE, treatment groups consisted of participants with relapsing MS receiving either high-dose frexalimab regimens (frexalimab-high), low-dose frexalimab regimens (frexalimab-low), or placebo-matched groups that switched to matching high or low doses of frexalimab at week 12 (placebo-low/frexalimab-low and placebo-high/frexalimab-high). Plasma NfL samples were collected and analyzed from all four groups at baseline, week 12, week 24, and week 48.
NfL biomarker results from the phase 2 study showed:
In February 2024, 12-week double-blind study period results were published in The New England Journal of Medicine, and at AAN in April 2024, 48-week open-label extension efficacy and safety data were featured in an oral presentation.
Sanofi has initiated global phase 3 studies of frexalimab in relapsing MS (NCT06141473) and non-relapsing secondary progressive MS (NCT06141486), which have begun enrolling participants.
About the phase 2 study
The phase 2 study was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study evaluating frexalimab in participants with relapsing MS. Participants were randomized (4:4:1:1) to receive either high dose (frexalimab 1200 mg intravenously every four weeks, with an initial 1800 mg loading dose) or low dose (frexalimab 300 mg subcutaneously every two weeks, with an initial 600 mg loading dose) frexalimab or matching placebo for 12 weeks (part A). The primary endpoint was the reduction in the number of new Gd+ T1 MRI brain lesions at week 12. Secondary endpoints included additional MRI-based efficacy measures as well as the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of frexalimab. After week 12, participants receiving placebo switched to respective frexalimab arms and entered the open-label part B, which is currently ongoing.
About frexalimab
Frexalimab (SAR441344) is a potentially first-in-class second-generation CD40L antibody that blocks the costimulatory CD40/CD40L pathway which is important for activation and function of adaptive (T and B cells) and innate (macrophages/microglia and dendritic cells) immunity. Through this unique upstream mechanism of action, frexalimab has the potential to address both acute and chronic neuroinflammation in MS, without causing lymphocyte depletion. Frexalimab has significant indications under development, such as phase 2 studies in systemic lupus erythematosus and Type 1 diabetes, and its safety and efficacy have not been reviewed by any regulatory authority. Sanofi is developing frexalimab under an exclusive license from ImmuNext Inc. For more information on frexalimab clinical studies, please visit www.ClinicalTrials.gov.
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