New study confirms and extends the neuroprotective effects of temelimab in MS

How Do I Know My MS Medicine is Working?

How Do I Know My MS Medicine is Working?

GeNeuro  a biopharmaceutical company developing new treatments for neurodegenerative and autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS), type-1 diabetes (T1D) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), today announced positive results from the ANGEL-MS study of its lead product, temelimab in MS. Temelimab is a humanized, monoclonal antibody designed to neutralize pHERV-W, a pathogenic protein thought to be a causal factor in the development of multiple sclerosis.

The ANGEL-MS data confirmed that treatment with temelimab for 2 years had a continued, positive impact on key MRI measures of disease progression in multiple sclerosis patients, confirming and extending the data reported at Week 48 in the CHANGE-MS Phase 2b study. This includes reductions in brain atrophy, particularly in the cortex and thalamus, and maintenance in myelin integrity, as measured by magnetization transfer ratio (MTR) imaging. Importantly, for the first time, encouraging dose-dependent effects were seen on clinical measures of disease progression. This has been evidenced by a lower proportion of patients with 12-week confirmed EDSS progression, or with 20% worsening in 25-foot timed walk.

Jesús Martin-Garcia, CEO of GeNeuro, said: “We are extremely pleased with this data, which clearly confirm the robust and consistent effects of temelimab on key MRI markers of neuroprotection, and we are excited by the early signs of clinical benefit. The results of ANGEL-MS confirm the potential of temelimab to act against disease progression, the largest unmet medical need in this indication. It further reinforces our determination to continue the development of temelimab in MS.”

“These results are remarkable, and they are coherent with temelimab’s novel mode of action seeking to stop the activation of the brain’s innate immunity and restoring the myelin repair system”, noted Prof Hans-Peter Hartung, chairman of the Department of Neurology of the University Hospital Düsseldorf and Lead Investigator of the study. “It offers promise to treat progressive patients with low inflammatory activity, and could have potential synergies with existing anti-inflammatory drugs in relapsing MS patients.”

ANGEL-MS (Assessing the HERV-W Env ANtagonist GNbAC1 (temelimab) for Evaluation in an open label Long-term Safety Study in patients with Multiple Sclerosis) was a 2-year safety and efficacy extension study to CHANGE-MS, which offered continued treatment to those patients who had completed the 12-month primary study. Ninety-four percent of eligible patients (n=219) entered ANGEL-MS and continued treatment at the same dose of temelimab they were receiving at the end of CHANGE-MS. ANGEL-MS was fully funded by Servier. Although the study had an early termination due to Servier’s decision to end the partnership with GeNeuro, all patients were offered end-of-study visits. Across the two studies, a total of 154 patients received temelimab treatment for 96 weeks or more. For patients not having completed 96 weeks, the end-of-study visit results were used in the analysis (last observation carried forward).

To ensure consistency, analyses of efficacy endpoints in ANGEL-MS were based on comparing the original groups in the CHANGE-MS study: temelimab (18mg/kg, 12mg/kg, 6mg/kg) and Control Group (i.e. patients originally randomized to placebo for 6 months in CHANGE-MS and re-randomized into the three active treatment arms for the last 6 months of CHANGE-MS).

ANGEL-MS confirmed that the 18mg/kg dose of temelimab continued to have remarkably consistent benefits over all other groups on key MRI measures linked to MS disease progression, confirming and extending the results of CHANGE-MS at Week 48.

Paraclinical MRI Measures Comparison 18 mg/kg temelimab versus Control Group
Reduction of brain atrophy
Cortex

42% relative reduction, dose effect1 p=0.058

Thalamus 43% relative reduction, dose effectp=0.038
Maintaining myelin integrity
MTR signal across cerebral cortical bands

Consistent improvement of 1.5-2 MTR % units, dose
effect1 p<0.03 in all bands

MTR signal across normal appearing white
matter bands

Consistent improvement of 1.5-2.3 MTR % units, dose
effect1 p<0.02 in all bands

The 18mg/kg treatment arm also showed lower probability for 12-week confirmed disability progression (Survival Wilcoxon test p=0.34).

12-week confirmed EDSS progression

18
mg/kg

12
mg/kg

6 mg/kg Control

Percentage of patients with 12-week confirmed
worsening in neurological disability from Baseline
CHANGE-MS to Week 48 ANGEL-MS

3.8 4.8 8.3 9.1

The measure of 25 foot timed-walk also showed remarkable stability for the 18mg/kg cohort, with only 2.4% of patients worsening ≥20% over two years (dose effect2 p=0.03).

Timed 25-foot walk

18
mg/kg

12
mg/kg

6 mg/kg Control

Percentage of patients with worsening ≥ 20% in
the Timed 25-Foot Walk Test compared to
CHANGE-MS Baseline

2.4 23.1 13.3 10.2

While these clinical measures are very encouraging, the limited size and relapsing nature of the cohort for clinical progression measures does not allow to derive any definitive conclusion.

Sensitivity analyses were performed, repeating all efficacy analyses by dose groups (irrespective of the length of treatment) and by total exposure to temelimab (independently of body weight) across the combined CHANGE-MS and ANGEL-MS studies. These sensitivity analyses all provided the same conclusions, demonstrating the robustness of the results seen on MRI measures linked to disease progression, as well as the encouraging dose-dependent clinical effects.