FDA Approves Talaris Therapeutics’ IND for its Allogeneic Cell Therapy FCR001 to be Evaluated in Patients with a Severe Form of Scleroderma

Talaris Therapeutics, Inc., a privately held biotechnology company developing transformative cell therapies that have the potential to induce durable immune tolerance across a range of indications, announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the company’s Investigational New Drug (IND) application for the evaluation of Talaris’ novel cell therapy FCR001 in the treatment of diffuse systemic sclerosis (SSc), a severe form of the rare autoimmune disease scleroderma.

 

 Talaris Therapeutics, Inc., a privately held biotechnology company developing transformative cell therapies that have the potential to induce durable immune tolerance across a range of indications, announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the company’s Investigational New Drug (IND) application for the evaluation of Talaris’ novel cell therapy FCR001 in the treatment of diffuse systemic sclerosis (SSc), a severe form of the rare autoimmune disease scleroderma. Approval of this IND allows Talaris to initiate a Phase 1/2a trial at sites across the U.S., including Duke University and the University of Michigan.

“We’re very eager to study the tolerogenic potential of FCR001 for patients with severe autoimmune disease,” said Scott Requadt, Chief Executive Officer of Talaris. “Individuals with diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis, a subset of scleroderma with high morbidity and mortality, are in great need of safe and effective, disease-modifying, treatment options. We believe FCR001 could represent an important new approach to treating this serious condition.”

Scleroderma, which derives from the Greek words “sclero,” meaning hard, and “derma,” meaning skin, is a rare and potentially fatal chronic autoimmune disease which causes progressive scarring, or fibrosis, of the body’s connective tissues. Scleroderma can either be localized or systemic. Systemic scleroderma, also called systemic sclerosis (SSc), is further divided into the limited cutaneous subset and the diffuse cutaneous subset, depending on the degree of skin involvement. Both types affect the skin and vital internal organs, especially the lungs, kidneys, gut and heart, resulting in organ dysfunction. Patients with the diffuse subset generally have rapidly progressive skin and internal organ involvement and have worse outcomes than the limited subtype.

Based on encouraging data from randomized clinical trials, autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) is increasingly used to treat severe cases of diffuse cutaneous SSc, where it has been shown to halt organ damage and induce clinical remission. However, because patients are transplanted with their own stem cells, there is a risk of disease recurrence, and patients typically must first undergo full myeloablative conditioning with or without total body irradiation, which is associated with direct organ toxicity and increased risk of future cancers.

Talaris’ allogeneic cell therapy, FCR001, is a novel, one-time treatment intended to induce immune tolerance in the recipient and which can be used across all levels of donor-recipient HLA mismatch. Treatment with FCR001 is preceded by non-myeloablative conditioning. In a Phase 2 clinical trial in de novo living donor kidney transplant recipients, FCR001 resulted in durable immune tolerance in 70% of the 37 recipients treated; these individuals were able to successfully discontinue their anti-rejection medications and no tolerized patient has had to resume immunosuppression (median follow-up of over 5 years, longest follow-up is over 10 years). Furthermore, seven of the successfully tolerized patients had kidney failure due to an underlying autoimmune disease, and none of these patients has experienced recurrence of their underlying autoimmune disease post-treatment. Based on these encouraging data and its broad therapeutic potential in autoimmune disease, FCR001 will be evaluated in a planned Phase 1/2a trial of patients with diffuse cutaneous SSc.

“A safe, allogeneic stem cell transplant treatment using nonmyeloablative conditioning could offer important additional benefits over current autologous HSCT as a treatment for this severe form of systemic sclerosis,” said Keith Michael Sullivan, M.D., Professor of Medicine at Duke University Medical School.

“The diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis subset I see in my practice have very limited treatment options. Autologous stem cell transplant has demonstrated the potential to induce durable remissions in randomized clinical trials, but involves significant risks to the patients,” said Dinesh Khanna, M.D., M.Sc., Director of the Scleroderma Program and Professor of Medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School. “I am excited to participate in this clinical trial of FCR001, and hopeful that it could result in a safer and more durably effective treatment for these patients.”

Reference:https://talaristx.com/2020/07/fda-approves-talaris-therapeutics-ind-for-its-allogeneic-cell-therapy-fcr001-to-be-evaluated-in-patients-with-a-severe-form-of-scleroderma/

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