Ironwood Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals Co., Ltd. have started a phase III clinical trial in China of linaclotide for the treatment of adults with irritable bowel syndrome with constipation (IBS-C). Linaclotide is currently approved in the United States for adults with IBS-C or chronic idiopathic constipation (CIC) and in the European Union for adults with moderate to severe IBS-C.
“IBS-C is estimated to affect at least 13 million adults in China, causing hallmark symptoms such as abdominal pain and constipation,” said David Snow, president of AstraZeneca China. “If approved in China, linaclotide could be the first prescription treatment specifically for IBS-C and could then help address an unmet need for millions of suffering patients.”
The double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled phase III clinical trial is expected to enroll approximately 800 adults with IBS-C in China, Australia and New Zealand. The design of the trial is similar to the 12-week phase III IBS-C trial that supported linaclotide regulatory approval in the United States and European Union. Patients will be randomized 1:1 to receive either 290mcg of linaclotide or placebo for 12 weeks. The co-primary endpoints of the trial are Abdominal Pain/Discomfort Responder at 12 weeks, which is defined in the study protocol as a patient who has at least a 30 per cent improvement in his/her abdominal pain/discomfort level for at least half of the treatment period, and IBS Degree of Relief Responder at 12 weeks, which is defined in the study protocol as a patient who is considerably or completely relieved of symptoms for at least half of the treatment period.
Ironwood and AstraZeneca anticipate the availability of top-line data in the first half of 2015 and, if approved by the China Food and Drug Administration (CFDA), anticipate that linaclotide could be commercialized in China in 2017.
“Linaclotide is approved in the US and in the European Union, and the initiation of this phase III trial is a critical step along the regulatory pathway to support approval in China. We continue to make strides toward our goal of bringing linaclotide to appropriate adult patients around the world, and we look forward to continuing to collaborate with AstraZeneca to serve the unmet needs of patients in China,” said Mark Currie, Ph.D., senior vice president, chief scientific officer, and president of research and development at Ironwood.
Based on a collaboration announced in October 2012, Ironwood and AstraZeneca are jointly responsible for the development and commercialization of linaclotide in China, with AstraZeneca primarily responsible for local operational execution. Under the terms of the collaboration, AstraZeneca made an upfront payment of $25 million to Ironwood, and the two companies will share the net profits and losses associated with linaclotide in China, with AstraZeneca carrying 55 percent of each until a certain specified milestone is achieved, moving to a 50/50 split thereafter. Ironwood is also eligible for $125 million in additional commercial milestone payments contingent on the achievement of certain sales targets.
Linaclotide is a guanylate cyclase-C (GC-C) agonist that is thought to work in two ways based on nonclinical models. Linaclotide binds to guanylate cyclase-C locally in the intestine, resulting in an increase in both intracellular and extracellular concentrations of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP). Elevation in intracellular cGMP is believed to stimulate secretion of intestinal fluid and accelerate gastrointestinal transit. Elevation in extracellular cGMP is believed to decrease the activity of pain-sensing nerves, which is thought to be responsible for a reduction in intestinal pain. The clinical relevance of the effect on pain fibers in nonclinical models has not been established.
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