Synthetic Biologics Inc., a developer of synthetic DNA-based therapeutics and innovative disease-modifying medicines for serious illnesses, has completed the patient enrollment in a phase II clinical trial evaluating the efficacy and safety of Synthetic Biologics' proprietary oral formulation of estriol (Trimesta) for the treatment of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (MS).
With over $8 million in external grant funding awarded to date, this Trimesta clinical trial should be fully funded to its completion.
“The completion of patient enrollment into the phase II Trimesta trial represents another important milestone for oral estriol and brings us one step closer to offering a new oral treatment option to patients with relapsing-remitting MS,” said Jeffrey Riley, chief executive officer of Synthetic Biologics. “As an oral therapy with a promising clinical profile, Trimesta is expected to be extremely well positioned to provide an important treatment option for this debilitating disease.”
The randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multi-centre phase II clinical trial of Trimesta (oral estriol) for relapsing-remitting MS in women initially enrolled a total of 164 patients. At 15 sites in the United States, clinical investigators have been administering either oral Trimesta or matching placebo in addition to glatiramer acetate (Copaxone), an FDA-approved therapy for MS, to women between the ages of 18-50 who have been recently diagnosed with relapsing-remitting MS. MS patients are being dosed and monitored for two years. The primary outcome measure for the study is the rate of relapse between the placebo and treated groups at two years, an accepted FDA-approvable endpoint in MS.
Current sales of injectable disease-modifying therapies for MS are estimated at $8.9 billion annually. According to various reports, sales of oral disease-modifying therapies for MS, of which Trimesta if and when approved would be in such class, are anticipated to exceed $5 billion annually by 2017.
“We are pleased to complete the enrollment of a total of 164 patients in this landmark MS trial,” said Rhonda Voskuhl, MD, director, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Multiple Sclerosis Programme, UCLA Department of Neurology, and lead Principal Investigator of the trial. “In the United States alone, over 200 people per week are diagnosed with MS, and approximately 70 per cent of them are women. Typically, relapsing-remitting MS is distinguished from the other forms of MS by the relapses, or attacks of declining neurologic function, followed by periods of remission. With this trial evaluating oral estriol (Trimesta), we would expect to demonstrate a reduction in the rate of relapses in these MS patients.”
Trimesta is Synthetic Biologics' proprietary drug candidate for the treatment of relapsing-remitting MS in women. Estriol has been approved and marketed for over 40 years throughout Europe and Asia for the treatment of post-menopausal hot flashes. It has never been approved by the FDA for any indication in the United States.
It has been scientifically documented that pregnant women with certain autoimmune diseases experience a spontaneous reduction of disease symptoms during pregnancy, particularly in the third trimester.
It has been hypothesized that the female hormone, estriol, produced by the placenta during pregnancy, plays a role in "fetal immune privilege," a process that prevents a mother's immune system from attacking and rejecting her fetus. Maternal levels of estriol increase in a linear fashion through the third trimester of pregnancy until birth, whereupon they abruptly return to low circulating levels. The anti-autoimmune effects of estriol may also be responsible for the beneficial effects of pregnancy on MS.
Rhonda Voskuhl, MD, has found that levels of estriol equivalent to pregnancy have potent immunomodulatory effects on MS. Dr Voskuhl has further shown in a small number of non-pregnant female MS patients that estriol may have a therapeutic benefit by regulating the immune system and thus reducing the relapse rates, similar to the response seen in MS patients during pregnancy.