Biodexa Looks To Prevent Or Delay The Worst Outcomes For Adolescents And Young Adults With Devastating Precancerous Condition
Registrational phase 3 clinical trials of Biodexa's (NASDAQ:BDRX) candidate eRapa are expected to start first quarter next year.
The candidate was developed with private funds and acquired by Biodexa, its second portfolio expansion in less than six months, and is supported by a $17 million grant from the State of Texas.
Individuals with hundreds of tiny precancerous polyps growing in their lower GI tract face serious trouble.
The condition, called Familial Adenomatous Polyposis, or FAP, is caused by a single gene mutation and is generally diagnosed in teenage years — a few polyps appear at first and are surgically removed.
But as the disease progresses — and it always does — the lining of the lower GI tract becomes blanketed with hundreds and even thousands of tiny polyps – too numerous for surgical removal.
There are extremely limited options for FAP patients, and if untreated, it leads to colorectal cancer 100% of the time. Without any FDA approved drugs, the only treatment option today is the removal of the colon and/or rectum, resulting in the lifelong use of a colostomy bag.
But hope could be on the horizon.
Biodexa Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:BDRX), an acquisition-focused biopharmaceutical company, recently acquired exclusive worldwide rights to eRapa™, a phase 3-ready candidate for slowing or preventing the growth of aggressive FAP precancerous polyps in the GI tract.
eRapa was acquired from Emtora Biosciences, which developed the candidate with funding from the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas. The institute is also supporting eRapa's phase 3 program with an additional $17 million grant. The potentially registrational phase 3 trial is expected to start in the first quarter of next year.
Data from a phase 2 study in FAP will be presented at podium presentations at two leading scientific conferences later this quarter. eRapa was studied in 30 FAP patients, with the primary endpoint being overall polyp burden at six months compared with baseline. The current standard of care is limited to ...
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