Reuters Health Information: Regulus hep C combo drug effective in mid-stage study
Regulus hep C combo drug effective in mid-stage study
Last Updated: 2016-02-17
By Rosmi Shaji
(Reuters) - Regulus Therapeutics Inc said interim mid-stage
data for its hepatitis C combination drug showed it had the
potential to sharply reduce the duration of the treatment to
four weeks from 12 weeks.
The company's shares recorded their best day in more than 15
months, rising as much as 41 percent to $8.85 in heavy trading
on Wednesday.
Regulus tested its injectable drug, RG-101, separately with
FDA-approved hepatitis C drugs such as Gilead Sciences Inc's
Harvoni (ledipasvir/sofosbuvir), Johnson & Johnson's Olysio
(simeprevir), and Bristol Myers Squibb's Daklinza
(daclatasvir).
Jefferies analyst Brian Abrahams said Gilead's hepatitis C
drug sales may take a hit if Regulus's treatment turns out to be
more effective in combination with drugs developed by its
rivals.
Gilead, with its two blockbuster drugs Harvoni and Sovaldi
(sofosbuvir), has dominated the market for hepatitis C, which
affects about 185 million people worldwide. Harvoni's total
sales were $13.86 billion in 2015.
However, the company has been facing growing competition
from rival treatments developed by AbbVie Inc and Merck Inc.
Regulus enrolled 79 patients with chronic hepatitis C virus
and 38 of these patients were being evaluated through eight
weeks of follow up.
The data showed 97 percent of these patients had a sustained
reduction of the virus at eight weeks of the treatment.
Analysts called Regulus's interim data set impressive but
cautioned that longer follow-up period would be needed to asses
the drug's curative potential.
Regulus said it expected to report 12-week response data in
the second quarter.
Most adverse events were mild to moderate though it appears
there were two serious adverse events that required
hospitalization, one possibly occurred after dosing, Abrahams
said.
Investors will be keen to know whether there will be any
other adverse effects related to the treatment during the study,
Cowen and Co analyst Eric Schmidt wrote in a note.
Regulus shares were up 13 percent at $7.10 on the Nasdaq on
Wednesday.
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