Breye Therapeutics Commences Oral Dosing of Danegaptide in Patients with Diabetic Retinopathy

• Investigating potential for an oral treatment in diabetic retinopathy
• First patient dosed in Phase 1b/2a clinical trial

Copenhagen, Denmark, 25 January 2024 – Breye Therapeutics ApS (Breye), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing novel oral therapies for retinal vascular diseases within ophthalmology, today announces the start of a phase 1b/2a clinical trial to investigate danegaptide, following oral administration, in patients suffering from diabetic macular edema (DME).

Breye is developing novel, oral ophthalmology drugs to address the need for more effective and less burdensome therapies for millions of patients suffering with deteriorating vision due to Diabetic Retinopathy (DR) or Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD). While there has been successful development of intravitreally administered products for patients with late-stage disease, treatment options are currently limited for patients in the early or moderate stages.

As an oral therapy, danegaptide targets the core pathological events in DR, including cell-cell uncoupling, apoptotic vascular cell death and vascular leakage, at earlier stages of disease progression.

With safety data derived from over 500 clinical trial participants, robust toxicology data, and strong non-clinical in vitro and in vivo efficacy results, there is strong support for danegaptide’s potential to address the clinical core ocular pathologies of vascular leakage and capillary breakdown. The positive effects of treating these pathologies have been clinically validated.

The study’s design is a multicenter, open-label, dose-escalating Phase 1b/2a study to assess the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), and early signs of biological activity following oral administration of danegaptide in participants diagnosed with DME.

Ulrik Mouritzen, Chief Executive Officer of Breye Therapeutics, said: “The launch of the Phase 1b/2a clinical trial for danegaptide represents a significant milestone towards realising our mission of developing more effective, globally accessible orally administered treatment solutions for patients at risk of vision loss and blindness. The burden on patients with diabetic retinopathy is significant and those who experience vision loss and blindness face threats to their physical and mental health and overall quality of life. At Breye, we are committed to help treat the disease earlier by offering effective oral therapies, to patients who currently have limited or no treatment options.”

Prof. Carl Regillo, MD, Director of Retina Service of Wills Eye Hospital and Professor of Ophthalmology at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, Member of the Breye Therapeutics Scientific Advisory Board, commented: “Danegaptide has the potential to become a valuable oral treatment option for patients with Diabetic Retinopathy. Patients should ideally be treated earlier and before the disease progresses to later stages, where laser treatments or intravitreally administered products are required.”

ENDS

For further information:
Optimum Strategic Communications
Mary Clark, Vici Rabbetts, Vareen Outhonesack
Tel: +44 208 078 4357
Email: breye@optimumcomms.com

About Breye Therapeutics
Breye is a biopharmaceutical company developing novel, oral ophthalmology drugs to address the needs of millions of patients suffering with deteriorating vision due to Diabetic Retinopathy (DR) or Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD), for which there are no treatments in early or moderate disease. Severe diabetic retinopathy requires intravitreal injections directly into the eye, which are unpopular with patients, resulting in a significant drop out rate of about 50% after 1 year and only 40% of patients obtain an optimal response. Orally administered drugs will be less burdensome than injections, as well as potentially more effective and commercially competitive. With its clinically de-risked safety profile, the lead program with danegaptide has potential for a short and well-accepted clinical regulatory pathway. Breye is also developing an oral P2X7R antagonist for AMD which seeks to reduce nerve damage and inflammation.

Breye raised a seed round from Novo Holdings and Sound BioVentures and received financial support from the BioInnovation Institute, the Danish Growth Foundation (Vækstfonden) and the Danish Innovation Foundation (Innovationsfonden).
For more information, please visit: https://breye.com