お知らせ • Jul 18
Biora Therapeutics, Inc. Announces Supplemental Data from Phase 1 Clinical Trial of BT-600 as Presented At KOL Event
Biora Therapeutics, Inc. presented supplemental data from the Phase 1 trial of BT-600 during the company’s virtual KOL event on Wednesday, July 17, 2024. BT-600, an orally administered drug-device combination, is in development for the treatment of patients with ulcerative colitis (UC). BT-600 leverages Biora’s ingestible NaviCap™ device to deliver a proprietary liquid formulation of tofacitinib directly to the colon. Tissue biopsies were performed to assess drug concentration in colonic tissues at 24 hours after dosing during the Phase 1 trial in healthy participants. Mean tissue concentrations for the splenic flexure, descending colon, and sigmoid colon were above the established IC50 for the JAK-STAT pathway, and a strong correlation was shown between tissue and corresponding plasma levels. The plasma/tissue correlation was used to model tissue levels at earlier time points, with the model projecting tissue levels above the IC90 through at least 16 hours after BT-600 5 mg or 10 mg doses. Biora’s virtual KOL event on July 17 featured Bruce Sands, MD, MS (Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai) and Brian Feagan, MD, FRCPC (Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry at the University of Western Ontario), who discussed the unmet need and current treatment landscape for patients with UC, as well as the value of colonic drug delivery for improving efficacy. Results from the Phase 1 clinical trial demonstrate a pharmacokinetic (PK) profile consistent with drug delivery and absorption in the colon for both single and multiple ascending dose (SAD/MAD) cohorts: First evidence of systemic absorption of tofacitinib was at six hours, consistent with colonic (vs. upper gastrointestinal) delivery. Maximal levels in the trial occurred at eight to ten hours vs. 30 minutes for conventional oral tofacitinib in other trials. Maximal systemic drug exposure was three to four times lower than that seen with conventional oral tofacitinib in other trials, demonstrating the NaviCap platform’s ability to deliver locally to the colon and limit systemic drug exposure. The distribution of colon tissue exposure suggests that pan-colonic delivery of tofacitinib was achieved: Sites in the distal colon were biopsied, following delivery of tofacitinib in the proximal colon. Biopsy results provided evidence of drug exposure extending to the distal colon, at common sites of disease. Modeling projects tissue levels at or above the estimated IC90 through at least 16 hours after dosing. Post-retrieval device analysis further confirmed that NaviCap devices accurately delivered drug in the colon, with no early release, and with >95% of devices detecting colon entry. NaviCap devices were well tolerated by participants in both the SAD and MAD cohorts: All AEs were mild and consistent with those expected in a healthy population. No evidence of device or drug colon toxicity; colon tissue histology was within normal limits. There were no notable changes or differences in safety laboratory parameters between groups. BT-600 is a drug/device combination of Biora’s NaviCap™ ingestible drug delivery device with a proprietary liquid formulation of tofacitinib, for the potential treatment of moderate to severe ulcerative colitis. The NaviCap device is orally administered and has been designed for anatomically targeted therapeutic delivery directly to the colon in this application. Biora's NaviCap targeted oral therapeutics platform utilizes a novel approach that could improve patient outcomes by enabling delivery of therapeutics directly to the site of disease, increasing therapeutic activity in tissue while reducing systemic uptake. For the 1.8 million patients in the United States who suffer from inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), existing therapeutics offer less than ideal efficacy, likely because of the challenges with safely achieving sufficient drug activity in the affected tissues. Research has shown that targeted delivery of therapeutics has the potential to improve patient outcomes in IBD. The NaviCap platform uses an ingestible device designed for targeted delivery of therapeutics to improve treatment of ulcerative colitis. Once swallowed, Biora’s GItrac™ autolocation technology enables the device to autonomously identify targeted locations in the GI tract and release a therapeutic dose of up to 500µl. Studies of the NaviCap device in healthy volunteers and patients with ulcerative colitis demonstrated successful delivery to the colon regardless of variable GI conditions, in both fasted and fed states. Ulcerative colitis (UC) is a type of IBD that causes chronic inflammation and damage to the colon. Common symptoms include abdominal pain, increased bowel movements, stool urgency, and rectal bleeding. Despite the availability of advanced treatments for UC, including biologics, immunomodulators, and targeted synthetic small molecules, only about 40% of patients achieve clinical remission in induction trials. Surgical intervention is needed in approximately 20% of UC patients, with up to 10% of patients requiring surgical removal of the colon. About 1.5 million people are affected with UC in the United States alone, and ~40,000 new cases are diagnosed each year.