Guest guest Posted February 27, 2006 Report Share Posted February 27, 2006 Coley Pharmaceutical Group Initiates Phase II Clinical Study of Actilon™ for Hepatitis C Wellesley, MA - February 23, 2006 Coley Pharmaceutical Group, Inc. (Nasdaq: COLY) today announced the initiation of a randomized Phase II clinical study of Actilon™ (CPG 10101) for the treatment of patients with chronic Hepatitis C infection. The Phase II clinical trial is expected to enroll ninety adults with genotype 1 Hepatitis C virus (HCV) who have failed previous therapy with the current standard of care. Subjects will be randomly assigned to one of three parallel treatment arms, which will evaluate two dose levels of Actilon (0.2 mg/kg once weekly or 0.5 mg/kg once weekly) in combination with pegylated interferon alpha and ribavirin or pegylated interferon alpha plus ribavirin alone (the current standard of care). The Phase II clinical trial is designed to compare the safety and tolerability of the different drug combinations, as well as the efficacy of the regimens in reducing viral load over 12 weeks and achieving a sustained virologic response for 24 weeks following 48 weeks of treatment. Coley expects preliminary data from this Phase II study to be available in the second half of 2006. " This study is designed to determine how frequently the combination of Actilon plus standard of care induces early and sustained virologic responses in this population of chronic Hepatitis C patients with a very high unmet medical need, " said L. Bratzler, Ph.D., President and Chief Executive Officer of Coley Pharmaceutical Group. " Based on its promising safety profile, novel dual mechanism of action, which stimulates both the innate and adaptive arms of the immune system, and preclinical and Phase I clinical studies data, we believe Actilon may prove to be an important component of both current and future therapeutic regimens in the treatment of chronic HCV. " Subjects in each of the three arms will be treated for 12 weeks, at which time an early virologic response analysis will be conducted to assess reductions in serum HCV RNA concentrations. Those patients who achieve a greater than 1.5 log reduction in serum HCV RNA levels compared to baseline will continue treatment in their assigned regimen for an additional 36 weeks. Patients in the standard of care arm who fail to achieve a response may be offered the option of switching to one of the combination therapy arms. Subjects whose HCV RNA levels are undetectable at the end of 48 weeks will be monitored for an additional 24 weeks to determine if they have achieved a sustained virologic response. Actilon is currently undergoing clinical evaluation both as a monotherapy and as part of combination regimens in an ongoing Phase Ib clinical study among chronic HCV patients who have previously responded to standard treatment but have since relapsed. Preliminary results from a dose-escalation trial which evaluated Actilon's safety when administered as a monotherapy to HCV patients demonstrated that Actilon is generally well tolerated over a wide dose range, and induces dose-dependent antiviral and immune responses consistent with the known pharmacologic mechanisms of this new class of immunomodulatory antiviral drug candidates. About Actilon and TLR Therapeutics™ Coley's proprietary TLR Therapeutics™ act through a specific class of targets, called Toll-like receptors, or TLRs, found in and on immune system cells which, in turn, direct the immune system to fight disease. Actilon, an investigational therapeutic, acts through the Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) found in dendritic cells and B cells and is designed to induce a durable and natural immune response to treat viral infections such as Hepatitis C. The compound stimulates the body's own production of antiviral cytokines and chemokines, such as interferons, and is designed to drive both early and sustained virus- specific memory immune responses to help clear infection. Actilon, (CPG 10101), Coley's proprietary product candidate for the treatment of viral infectious disease, is being developed for the treatment of patients chronically infected with Hepatitis C virus (HCV) to address many of the shortcomings of current therapies. Actilon is a synthetic oligonucleotide and selective TLR9 agonist which enhances the ability of dendritic cells to activate killer T cells against invaders. Actilon appears to stimulate TLR9 in a different way from CPG 7909 resulting in significantly stronger activation of interferon-α production by the plasmacytoid dendritic cells. Actilon operates through a dual method of action consisting of both innate and adaptive immunity antiviral mechanisms. Actilon was designed to induce not only the early short-term innate immune effects that temporarily control the virus, but also to trigger adaptive immunity, with a strong killer T cell response, that we believe may provide sustained anti-infective effects. We believe Actilon therapy may allow the duration of HCV therapy to be reduced significantly, thereby resulting in reduced toxicity and improved patient compliance. Based on results observed in our early clinical trials, we believe that Actilon - like interferon α and ribavirin treatment -- will trigger an innate immune response to HCV resulting in an early virologic response in many people. In contrast to conventional interferon-α therapy, we believe that Actilon may cause faster and more effective dendritic cell maturation in the patients, followed by more rapid enhancement of the adaptive immune response that is thought to be required for controlling difficult-to-treat chronic viral diseases, such as HCV and HIV. Thus, in HCV, we expect that Actilon therapy may lead to more rapid and more frequent development of a sustained viral response, even in the difficult to treat and most common genotype 1 patients. We believe that Actilon will be capable of inducing and amplifying potent and natural antiviral mechanisms at relatively well-tolerated doses. In addition, based on the preclinical tests we have conducted in infection models, we believe that synthetic TLR9 agonists such as Actilon may have broad utility in the treatment and prevention of many types of infections because of their ability to activate both the short-term innate and sustained adaptive responses of the immune system. Coley believes that the ability of Actilon to at least partially reverse dendritic cell dysfunction and enhance the Th1 response could lead to improved clinical outcomes not only in chronic HCV, but also other chronic infections such as Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), Hepatitis B and herpes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.