Vedanta Presents Data from Multiple Studies at Digestive Disease Week 2022 Annual Meeting
Vedanta Biosciences presented key findings from multiple clinical studies on their defined bacterial consortia at Digestive Disease Week 2022. The Phase 2 CONSORTIUM study showed that VE303 significantly reduced recurrent Clostridioides difficile infections, achieving a 31.7% absolute risk reduction compared to placebo. Further analysis indicated that higher doses resulted in improved strain colonization and lower recurrence rates. Additionally, safety results for VE202 and VE818 from Phase 1 studies were promising, showing good tolerability and effective colonization in healthy volunteers.
- VE303 achieved a 31.7% absolute risk reduction in CDI recurrence compared to placebo.
- Higher doses of VE303 led to robust colonization and clinically significant outcomes.
- VE202 and VE818 exhibited good safety profiles and effective strain colonization.
- None.
Data presentations include review of the VE303 Phase 2 CONSORTIUM study, in which VE303 was well tolerated and highly active at preventing Clostridioides difficile infection recurrence in subjects at high risk of recurrence
Further CONSORTIUM study analysis shows that the VE303 high dose led to more robust colonization, which in turn correlated with prevention of recurrence
Safety and colonization analyses of VE202 and VE818 Phase 1 studies show they were well tolerated, colonized robustly after vancomycin pretreatment, and were associated with increased production of secondary bile acids that are known to induce immune tolerance
“As leaders in the research and development of defined bacterial consortia-based therapies, we are continually pushing to deepen our ability to understand and shape clinical outcomes by quantifying the colonization dynamics of our rationally designed and rigorously manufactured product candidates. This effort is part of our work to overcome the limitations of older methods, such as fecal matter transplants and spore fractions, which are inherently variable, challenging to scale, and susceptible to pathogen transmission from donors,” said
Colonization dynamics is analogous to traditional drug pharmacokinetics and refers to the growth and persistence over time of bacterial strain populations in the human gut.
Details of the Oral Presentations at DDW 2022:
Title: An 8-strain, rationally defined bacterial consortium, VE303, reduces the risk of Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) recurrence compared with placebo in adults at high risk for recurrence: Results for the Phase 2 CONSORTIUM study
Presenter:
The design and topline results of this study were announced in
The VE303 high dose met the primary endpoint of a lower recurrence rate at eight weeks, when compared with placebo (13.8 percent versus 45.5 percent). This 31.7 percent reduction in absolute risk of recurrence reflected a greater than 80 percent reduction in the odds of a recurrence in the VE303 high-dose group compared with the placebo group (odds ratio 0.192; 90 percent confidence interval 0.048, 0.712; p=0.0077). Most patients in the study reported one or more adverse events, but the overall safety profiles were similar across the active and placebo groups, and most adverse events were of mild intensity. There were no treatment-related serious adverse events in any group.
Title: Rapid and durable colonization of VE303 in Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) patients is associated with clinical efficacy: Results of the Phase 2 CONSORTIUM study
Presenter and time:
This analysis evaluated fecal samples from study participants in the Phase 2 CONSORTIUM study that were obtained during dosing and at weeks four and seven. Metagenomic sequencing was performed to identify associations between VE303 strain colonization, resident microbes, and clinical safety and efficacy endpoints.
Among the enrolled patients who were at high risk of CDI recurrence, the VE303 high dose led to more robust colonization of the eight consortium strains at Day 14 than the VE303 low dose, in terms of both strain detection (median, six versus three strains) and relative abundance (median, 5.2 percent versus 0.8 percent). Better VE303 strain colonization was associated with clinical activity and was greatest among those who received the VE303 high dose. Across all VE303 recipients, higher colonization at the end of dosing was associated with a lower probability of CDI recurrence. Higher bacterial species diversity and more rapid recovery of the normal resident microbial community were observed with use of VE303 high dose and were also associated with non-recurrence.
Title: Durable colonization of the rationally designed live biotherapeutic products VE202 and VE818 in healthy volunteers.
Presenter: Emily Crossette, Ph.D.
The Phase 1 studies of VE202 (a defined bacterial consortium candidate for inflammatory bowel disease) and VE818 (a defined bacterial consortium candidate for an undisclosed indication) were similarly designed double-blind, placebo-controlled studies in healthy adults, enrolling a total of 31 and 74 subjects, respectively. The studies assessed safety, tolerability, and colonization dynamics. Subjects received a low dose, high dose, or placebo for one or 14 days, with or without vancomycin antibiotic pretreatment, and were followed for six months after treatment. Strain colonization was quantified with metagenomics and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Additionally, levels of bacterial metabolites associated with immune tolerance were measured.
Both VE202 and VE818 were well tolerated. Vancomycin pretreatment was required to ensure robust strain colonization. Strain colonization was persistent in most subjects through the end-of-study visit. Additionally, dose duration was an important driver of long-term persistence of colonization. Colonization with VE202 and VE818 was associated with increased stool concentrations of secondary bile acids, which have several beneficial immunoregulatory functions, as early as the first week of treatment.
About VE303
VE303 is a first-in-class defined bacterial consortium therapeutic candidate designed for the prevention of recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection (rCDI). It consists of eight strains that were rationally selected using Vedanta’s discovery engine. VE303 is produced from pure, clonal bacterial cell banks, which yield a standardized drug product in powdered form and bypasses the need to rely on direct sourcing from donor fecal material of inconsistent composition. Vedanta reported positive topline results in
About VE202
VE202 is a first-in-class defined bacterial consortium therapeutic candidate for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). It consists of 16 bacterial strains of the Clostridia class that were rationally selected. It is designed to induce immune tolerance in the gut, reverse the gut microbiota abnormalities that are common in patients with IBD, and strengthen the epithelial barrier. Results describing the biology and candidate selection of VE202 were previously described in multiple publications in Science and Nature. In a Phase 1 study conducted in healthy adults, VE202 colonized abundantly following a short course of antibiotic pretreatment, with most strains detected in stool samples from most study participants within 1 week and persisting through the final sample at Week 24. Multiple-day dosing led to significantly greater and more durable colonization than did single-day dosing. VE202 was also well tolerated, with most adverse events unrelated to study treatment, gastrointestinal in nature, and of mild or moderate intensity.
About Vedanta Biosciences
Vedanta Biosciences is leading the development of a potential new category of oral therapies based on defined consortia of bacteria isolated from the human microbiome and grown from pure clonal cell banks. The company’s clinical-stage pipeline includes product candidates being evaluated for the treatment of high-risk C. difficile infection, inflammatory bowel diseases, food allergy, liver disease, and cancer. These investigational therapies are grounded in pioneering research – published in leading journals including Science, Nature, and Cell – to identify beneficial bacteria that live symbiotically within the healthy human gut, fight pathogens and induce a range of potent immune responses. Vedanta Biosciences controls a foundational portfolio of more than 45 patents and has built what it believes is one of the largest libraries of bacteria derived from the human microbiome. Proprietary capabilities include deep expertise in consortium design, vast datasets from human interventional studies, and CGMP-compliant manufacturing of oral Live Biotherapeutic Product (LBP) candidates containing pure, clonally-derived bacterial consortia in powdered form. Vedanta Biosciences was founded by
About Digestive Disease Week®
Digestive Disease Week® (DDW) is the largest international gathering of physicians, researchers and academics in the fields of gastroenterology, hepatology, endoscopy and gastrointestinal surgery. Jointly sponsored by the
Acknowledgement and Disclaimer:
Vedanta’s VE303 program has been funded in part with Federal funds from the
The VE303 research reported in this press release is supported in part by CARB-X. CARB-X’s funding for this project is sponsored by the Cooperative Agreement Number IDSEP160030 from ASPR/BARDA and by an award from Wellcome. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of CARB-X or any of its funders.
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Source: Vedanta Biosciences
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