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Alterity Therapeutics Presents Encouraging New Data from its ATH434 Phase 2 Trial in Multiple System Atrophy at the American Academy of Neurology Annual Meeting

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ALTERITY THERAPEUTICS LIMITED
ALTERITY THERAPEUTICS LIMITED

– Clinically Meaningful Efficacy Observed on Multiple Assessments –

– Confirmed Target Engagement with Reduced Iron Signal in MSA Affected Brain Regions –

MELBOURNE, Australia and SAN FRANCISCO, April 10, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Alterity Therapeutics (ASX: ATH, NASDAQ: ATHE) (“Alterity” or “the Company”), a biotechnology company dedicated to developing disease modifying treatments for neurodegenerative diseases, today announced that new presentations related to its Multiple System Atrophy (MSA) program were delivered at the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) 2025 Annual Meeting, one of the premier global neurology meetings. Notably, new data from the ATH434-201 trial was prominently featured via an oral presentation during a Scientific Platform Session on Movement Disorders.

“We are excited to present these new data from our double-blind Phase 2 trial, reinforcing the potential of ATH434 to significantly modify disease progression in MSA. The clinical results from this study are important given the lack of available treatments to address the underlying pathology in MSA,” said, David Stamler, M.D., Chief Executive Officer of Alterity. “Importantly, we saw clinically meaningful efficacy on multiple measures including the UMSARS1 I activities of daily living scale, the clinical global impression of severity, the orthostatic hypotension symptom assessment, and activity levels from wearable sensors. In addition, new analyses of neuroimaging data show target engagement of ATH434 on iron levels in MSA affected regions of the brain. We look forward to engaging with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and other regulatory authorities as we seek to advance the development of this potentially disease modifying therapy for individuals living with MSA.”

“In addition, results from the bioMUSE natural history study were presented by our collaborators at Vanderbilt University Medical Center on the use of wearable sensors to assess outpatient activity. These data support the utility of digital outcomes in MSA trials and reinforce the relevance of the findings in our double-blind trial,” concluded Dr. Stamler.

Type: Oral Presentation
Title: Topline Data from a Randomized, Double Blind, Placebo Controlled Phase 2 Study of ATH434 in Multiple System Atrophy
Presenter: Daniel Claassen, M.D., M.S., Professor of Neurology at Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Summary: The oral presentation produced additional data on Alterity’s ATH434-201 Phase 2 clinical trial. Overall, the study results support continued advancement of ATH434 for the treatment of MSA. The imaging outcomes in n=61 participants indicate a heterogeneous localization of pathology and evidence that ATH434 reduces the iron signal in MSA affected brain regions. The clinical analysis included 71 patients who had at least one-post baseline UMSARS I assessment. The data showed that on the modified UMSARS I rating scale, ATH434 demonstrated a clinically significant treatment effect versus placebo with a 48% decrease in clinical progression at the 50 mg dose (p=0.02)^ and a 30% decrease in clinical progression at the 75 mg dose at 52 weeks. Additional assessments showed improvement: the Clinical Global Impression of Severity Scale2 (7-point scale, higher score worse), including a nominally significant difference at the 50 mg dose (p=0.0088) at 52 weeks. The Orthostatic Hypotension Symptom Assessment (patient reported outcome) showed trends favoring benefit in both groups (p=0.08 at 50 mg dose, p=0.14 at 75 mg dose). Increased activity in the outpatient setting was seen on wearable sensors at both dose levels as compared to placebo, with observed improvements in step count, bouts of walking, total walking time, and total standing time. The benefit on step count at 50 mg was nominally significant (p<0.05).