NPM-119 is being studied to address medication non-adherence and potentially improve tolerability issues associated with oral and injectable type 2 diabetes medications, by providing long-term therapeutic delivery of exenatide for six months
Study will represent first clinical application of NanoPortal™, the company’s proprietary, implant platform technology
ALAMEDA, CA, USA I June 13, 2024 I Vivani Medical, Inc. (Nasdaq: VANI) (“Vivani” or the “Company”), an innovative, biopharmaceutical company developing novel, long-term drug implants, today announced the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has cleared the Investigational New Drug Application (“IND”) and lifted the clinical hold on NPM-119 to allow initiation of LIBERATE-1™, a Phase 1 clinical trial to assess the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of NPM-119 (exenatide), the Company’s miniature, six-month GLP-1 implant in development for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.
“Today marks a significant milestone for Vivani as we transition to a clinical-stage company with a promising drug candidate that has the potential to address medication non-adherence, which affects approximately 50% of patients with type 2 diabetes. LIBERATE-1 represents our first-in-human study of NPM-119 in type 2 diabetes patients, as well as the first clinical application of our innovative NanoPortal™ implant technology in humans,” said Adam Mendelsohn, Ph.D., Vivani President and Chief Executive Officer. “This seminal work will characterize how NPM-119’s promising preclinical pharmacokinetic profile translates to humans versus the marketed once-weekly exenatide active comparator, Bydureon BCise®.”
Dr. Mendelsohn added: “The results of the study will also apply to our lead program, NPM-115, which is under development for chronic weight management and demonstrated weight loss comparable to injections of semaglutide, the active ingredient in blockbuster products Ozempic® and Wegovy®, in preclinical studies earlier this year. Subject to regulatory approval, we believe that NPM-115’s six-month dosage form will make it an attractive and highly differentiated option within the extraordinarily large and rapidly growing obesity market. We are focused on final study preparations and anticipate initiating LIBERATE-1 during the second half of the year.”
LIBERATE-1 is a randomized, 12-week investigation of the safety, tolerability, and full pharmacokinetic profile of NPM-119 in patients with type 2 diabetes. LIBERATE-1 will enroll patients who have previously received GLP-1 therapy, which will be discontinued prior to receiving either NPM-119 or the active comparator.
Vivani continues advancing its emerging pipeline of innovative, highly differentiated drug implants leveraging its proprietary NanoPortal™ subdermal implant technology, designed to guarantee medication adherence and improve patient outcomes in the treatment of chronic diseases such as chronic weight management and type 2 diabetes.
In addition to NPM-119 for the treatment of type 2 diabetes, Vivani is advancing the development of NPM-115 (high-dose exenatide implant) and NPM-139 (semaglutide implant), both promising treatments under development for chronic weight management. NPM-139 has the added potential for a once-yearly treatment duration.
About Vivani Medical, Inc.
Leveraging its proprietary NanoPortal platform, Vivani develops biopharmaceutical implants designed to deliver drug molecules steadily over extended periods of time with the goal of guaranteeing adherence, and potentially to improve tolerance to their medication. Vivani’s lead programs, NPM-115 and NPM-119, are miniature, six-month, GLP-1 implants in development for the treatment of type 2 diabetes and chronic weight management in obese or overweight patients, respectively. Both NPM-115 and NPM-119 are exenatide based products with a higher-dose associated with NPM-115 for the treatment of chronic weight management in obese or overweight patients. These NanoPortal implants are designed to provide patients with the opportunity to realize the full potential benefit of their medication by avoiding the challenges associated with the daily or weekly administration of orals and injectables. Medication non-adherence occurs when patients do not take their medication as prescribed. This affects an alarming number of patients, approximately 50%, including those taking daily pills. Medication non-adherence, which contributes to more than $500 billion in annual avoidable healthcare costs and 125,000 potentially preventable deaths annually in the U.S. alone, is a primary and daunting reason obese or overweight patients, and patients taking type 2 diabetes or other chronic disease treatments face significant challenges in achieving positive real-world effectiveness.
Vivani’s wholly owned subsidiary Cortigent is developing targeted neurostimulation systems intended to help patients recover critical body functions. Investigational devices include Orion®, designed to provide artificial vision to people who are profoundly blind, and a new system intended to accelerate the recovery of arm and hand function in patients who are partially paralyzed due to stroke. The company has developed, manufactured, and marketed an implantable visual prosthetic device, Argus II®, that delivered meaningful visual perception to blind individuals. Vivani continues to assess strategic options for advancing Cortigent’s pioneering technology.
SOURCE: Vivani
Post Views: 2,679
NPM-119 is being studied to address medication non-adherence and potentially improve tolerability issues associated with oral and injectable type 2 diabetes medications, by providing long-term therapeutic delivery of exenatide for six months
Study will represent first clinical application of NanoPortal™, the company’s proprietary, implant platform technology
ALAMEDA, CA, USA I June 13, 2024 I Vivani Medical, Inc. (Nasdaq: VANI) (“Vivani” or the “Company”), an innovative, biopharmaceutical company developing novel, long-term drug implants, today announced the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has cleared the Investigational New Drug Application (“IND”) and lifted the clinical hold on NPM-119 to allow initiation of LIBERATE-1™, a Phase 1 clinical trial to assess the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of NPM-119 (exenatide), the Company’s miniature, six-month GLP-1 implant in development for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.
“Today marks a significant milestone for Vivani as we transition to a clinical-stage company with a promising drug candidate that has the potential to address medication non-adherence, which affects approximately 50% of patients with type 2 diabetes. LIBERATE-1 represents our first-in-human study of NPM-119 in type 2 diabetes patients, as well as the first clinical application of our innovative NanoPortal™ implant technology in humans,” said Adam Mendelsohn, Ph.D., Vivani President and Chief Executive Officer. “This seminal work will characterize how NPM-119’s promising preclinical pharmacokinetic profile translates to humans versus the marketed once-weekly exenatide active comparator, Bydureon BCise®.”
Dr. Mendelsohn added: “The results of the study will also apply to our lead program, NPM-115, which is under development for chronic weight management and demonstrated weight loss comparable to injections of semaglutide, the active ingredient in blockbuster products Ozempic® and Wegovy®, in preclinical studies earlier this year. Subject to regulatory approval, we believe that NPM-115’s six-month dosage form will make it an attractive and highly differentiated option within the extraordinarily large and rapidly growing obesity market. We are focused on final study preparations and anticipate initiating LIBERATE-1 during the second half of the year.”
LIBERATE-1 is a randomized, 12-week investigation of the safety, tolerability, and full pharmacokinetic profile of NPM-119 in patients with type 2 diabetes. LIBERATE-1 will enroll patients who have previously received GLP-1 therapy, which will be discontinued prior to receiving either NPM-119 or the active comparator.
Vivani continues advancing its emerging pipeline of innovative, highly differentiated drug implants leveraging its proprietary NanoPortal™ subdermal implant technology, designed to guarantee medication adherence and improve patient outcomes in the treatment of chronic diseases such as chronic weight management and type 2 diabetes.
In addition to NPM-119 for the treatment of type 2 diabetes, Vivani is advancing the development of NPM-115 (high-dose exenatide implant) and NPM-139 (semaglutide implant), both promising treatments under development for chronic weight management. NPM-139 has the added potential for a once-yearly treatment duration.
About Vivani Medical, Inc.
Leveraging its proprietary NanoPortal platform, Vivani develops biopharmaceutical implants designed to deliver drug molecules steadily over extended periods of time with the goal of guaranteeing adherence, and potentially to improve tolerance to their medication. Vivani’s lead programs, NPM-115 and NPM-119, are miniature, six-month, GLP-1 implants in development for the treatment of type 2 diabetes and chronic weight management in obese or overweight patients, respectively. Both NPM-115 and NPM-119 are exenatide based products with a higher-dose associated with NPM-115 for the treatment of chronic weight management in obese or overweight patients. These NanoPortal implants are designed to provide patients with the opportunity to realize the full potential benefit of their medication by avoiding the challenges associated with the daily or weekly administration of orals and injectables. Medication non-adherence occurs when patients do not take their medication as prescribed. This affects an alarming number of patients, approximately 50%, including those taking daily pills. Medication non-adherence, which contributes to more than $500 billion in annual avoidable healthcare costs and 125,000 potentially preventable deaths annually in the U.S. alone, is a primary and daunting reason obese or overweight patients, and patients taking type 2 diabetes or other chronic disease treatments face significant challenges in achieving positive real-world effectiveness.
Vivani’s wholly owned subsidiary Cortigent is developing targeted neurostimulation systems intended to help patients recover critical body functions. Investigational devices include Orion®, designed to provide artificial vision to people who are profoundly blind, and a new system intended to accelerate the recovery of arm and hand function in patients who are partially paralyzed due to stroke. The company has developed, manufactured, and marketed an implantable visual prosthetic device, Argus II®, that delivered meaningful visual perception to blind individuals. Vivani continues to assess strategic options for advancing Cortigent’s pioneering technology.
SOURCE: Vivani
Post Views: 2,679