Omeros Corporation,a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company, has started enrollment in a phase II clinical trial of OMS824, the company's phosphodiesterase 10 (PDE10) inhibitor. The trial will evaluate the compound's tolerability, safety, pharmacokinetics, potential interactions with concomitant antipsychotic medications, and a battery of cognitive tests in patients with stable schizophrenia.
The phase I clinical programme in healthy subjects established dosing regimens that were well tolerated and associated with high levels of PDE10 target engagement in the brain, supporting advancement of OMS824 into patient-directed trials. In this phase II clinical trial, OMS824 will be administered at various dose levels for two weeks to patients whose antipsychotic medications have been temporarily discontinued or who continue their usual antipsychotic regimen in order to assess the effects of OMS824 as monotherapy and in combination with antipsychotic medications. A variety of cognitive tests will be assessed, although the relatively small size of this trial will limit the ability to detect treatment effects, if present. The safety and any efficacy findings in this trial are planned for use in determining appropriate dosing regimens and selecting endpoints for subsequent phase II and phase III clinical trials in schizophrenia. Those trials are expected to evaluate OMS824 in schizophrenic patients who are psychiatrically stable with cognitive impairment, in patients with acute exacerbation of symptoms, and/or in patients with inadequate response to antipsychotic medications.
"We are excited to begin assessing OMS824 in patients suffering with schizophrenia," stated Gregory A Demopulos, MD, chairman and chief executive officer of Omeros. "This phase II trial will provide us with important information on our compound's safety and, potentially, efficacy for additional phase II trials in schizophrenia and Huntington's disease. We look forward to completing the current trial later this year."
PDE10 is an enzyme that is expressed in areas of the brain linked to diseases that affect cognition and psychomotor functions, including Huntington's disease and schizophrenia. Huntington's disease is a hereditary neurodegenerative disorder that leads to movement, cognition, and behavioral abnormalities and premature death. Schizophrenia is a group of severe brain disorders characterized by an abnormal interpretation of reality, which can manifest as delusions, hallucinations, and/or disordered thinking and behavior. Cognitive dysfunction is responsible for substantial disability in both of these diseases and is not meaningfully improved by current medications. Omeros' proprietary compound OMS824 inhibits PDE10 and is being developed for the treatment of cognitive disorders. In addition to potential benefits on cognition, OMS824 could also improve the motor and psychiatric abnormalities in Huntington's disease as well as the positive (e.g., hallucinations) and negative (e.g., flat affect) symptoms of schizophrenia.
Omeros is a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company committed to discovering, developing and commercializing products targeting inflammation, coagulopathies and disorders of the central nervous system.