Cortexyme’s Atuzaginstat Slowed Cognitive Decline in Participants With Alzheimer’s Disease and P. Gingivalis Infection in Phase 2/3 GAIN Trial: Additional Top-line Data Presented at CTAD 2021
Cortexyme (Nasdaq: CRTX) presented new data from its Phase 2/3 GAIN Trial at the CTAD 2021 conference, highlighting P. gingivalis as a potential driver of Alzheimer’s disease. The 643-participant trial explored the efficacy of atuzaginstat, showing that it slowed cognitive decline compared to placebo in patients with confirmed P. gingivalis infection. Notably, the 40 mg BID dosage demonstrated better efficacy and safety than the 80 mg BID. Despite mixed statistical significance, results point to promising therapeutic insights for Alzheimer’s treatment.
- Identification of P. gingivalis as a potential driver of Alzheimer's disease.
- Atuzaginstat showed a slowing of cognitive decline in specific populations.
- 40 mg BID dosage exhibited better efficacy and safety than 80 mg BID.
- Significant correlation between reduced P. gingivalis levels and clinical outcomes.
- The study did not meet statistical significance on co-primary cognitive and functional endpoints in the overall cohort.
- Adverse events included mild gastrointestinal issues and dose-related liver enzyme elevations.
Evidence supports P. gingivalis as a driver of Alzheimer’s in easily identified patient population
Successful identification of target population and therapeutic dose inform next steps
The 643-participant 48-week GAIN Trial was the first large study to test the efficacy of an oral small-molecule targeting P. gingivalis for disease modification in mild to moderate Alzheimer’s patients. While not meeting statistical significance on its co-primary cognitive and functional endpoints in the overall cohort, the study data showed that treatment with atuzaginstat slowed decline compared to placebo on the majority of clinical endpoints in prespecified populations that were selected based on P. gingivalis infection markers.
The GAIN Trial results showed that the 40 mg BID arm demonstrated equivalent or better efficacy across key endpoints compared to the higher dose, 80 mg BID, as well as a superior safety profile. Trends to benefit at 40 mg BID were seen with multiple prespecified analytic approaches, including on ADAS-Cog11, CDR-SB, MMSE, and NPI, with increasing separation from placebo throughout the study consistent with disease modification. Benefits were not seen on ADCS-ADL at either dose. Changes in P. gingivalis DNA levels in saliva correlated significantly with clinical outcomes during and at the end of treatment, demonstrating that reduced P. gingivalis bacterial load resulted in better clinical outcomes. A trend to slowing of the primary biomarker endpoint of hippocampal atrophy was seen in treatment groups, but did not reach significance.
“Our ability to identify the right population in historically hard to treat mild to moderate Alzheimer’s patients, along with finding an efficacious dose with a differentiated safety profile, is important progress toward a breakthrough treatment for Alzheimer’s disease,” said
“The GAIN Trial achieved several significant advancements for the Alzheimer’s field, first by clinically confirming that P. gingivalis is a key upstream driver of disease progression. Further, the data demonstrated a compelling risk-benefit profile with a clinically significant treatment response in an easily identifiable population of patients,” said
Across critical safety measures, the rates in the 40 mg BID treatment arm were either comparable to placebo or substantially better than in the 80 mg BID arm. Most adverse events were mild to moderate in severity. The most common were gastrointestinal, such as diarrhea in up to
“The data generated from this first-of-its-kind study adds an important new dimension to our understanding of Alzheimer’s disease,” said
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Forward-Looking Statements
Statements in this news release contain “forward-looking statements” that are subject to substantial risks and uncertainties. Forward-looking statements contained in this news release may be identified by the use of words such as “anticipate,” “expect,” “believe,” “will,” “may,” “should,” “estimate,” “project,” “outlook,” “forecast,” “potential” or other similar words. Examples of forward-looking statements include, among others, the strategic development path for atuzaginstat, its business plans, strategy, planned clinical trials and timeline, prospects, and milestone expectations; the timing and success of the company’s clinical trials and related data, including plans and the ability to conduct a confirmatory study with respect to the GAIN Trial; the potential of atuzaginstat to treat Alzheimer’s disease; the timing of announcements and updates relating to its clinical trials and related data; the potential therapeutic benefits, safety and efficacy of the company’s product candidate or library of compounds and statements about its ability to obtain, and the timing relating to, further development of atuzaginstat, regulatory submissions and interactions with regulators, and related response and decisions, including with respect to the company’s partial clinical hold, and approvals with respect to the company’s drug product candidate. Forward-looking statements are based on Cortexyme’s current expectations and are subject to inherent uncertainties, risks, and assumptions that are difficult to predict and could cause actual results to differ materially from what the company expects. Further, certain forward-looking statements are based on assumptions as to future events that may not prove to be accurate. Factors that could cause actual results to differ include, but are not limited to, the risks and uncertainties described in the section titled “Risk Factors” in Cortexyme’s Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the
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