Arch Biopartners’ Cilastatin Drug Candidate to Participate in the PONTIAC Phase II Trial Targeting Acute Kidney Injury Caused by Drug Toxins

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Arch Biopartners
Arch Biopartners
  • Arch is repurposing cilastatin, a dipeptidase-1 inhibitor, as a new treatment for acute kidney injury (AKI)

  • Cilastatin is particularly well suited to prevent AKI caused by drug toxins due to its unique off-target effects that block toxin uptake into the kidney tissue

  • Arch continues to perform a Phase II trial for LSALT peptide targeting cardiac surgery-associated-AKI

  • Drug toxins and CS-AKI account for up to 50% of all AKI occurring in hospitals, for which there is no treatment available

TORONTO, Aug. 02, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Arch Biopartners Inc., (“Arch” or the “Company”) (TSX Venture: ARCH and OTCQB: ACHFF), announced today that cilastatin, the Company’s second drug candidate for preventing acute kidney injury (AKI), will participate in the upcoming investigator led trial entitled “Prevention Of NephroToxin Induced Acute kidney injury with Cilastatin” (PONTIAC). PONTIAC is a 900 patient Phase II trial that will evaluate the efficacy of the dipeptidase-1 inhibitor cilastatin for preventing AKI caused by drugs such as antibiotics, chemotherapeutic agents and radiographic contrast.

The PONTIAC clinical team of investigators, based out of the Universities of Calgary and Alberta, was awarded $1,500,000 by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) to fund the trial. The clinical team also received $400,000 as part of the Accelerating Clinical Trials (ACT) call for proposals to “Evaluate Canadian Biotechnologies with Randomized Controlled Trials” (October 2023). Funds from both grants will be used by the clinical team to conduct the PONTIAC trial.

The PONTIAC clinical team sponsoring the trial is based in Calgary and is currently preparing to submit a Clinical Trial Application (CTA) to Health Canada to proceed with the trial by the fourth quarter of 2024. Arch is acting as a study partner for grant funding opportunities, providing cilastatin drug product and providing scientific and regulatory advice.

Cilastatin is an enzymatic dipeptidase-1 (DPEP1) inhibitor approved by the FDA in 1985 for use as fixed combination with imipenem to treat different types of bacterial infections. Arch has method-of-use patents for repurposing cilastatin as a treatment for acute kidney injury (AKI) in several jurisdictions, including North America and Europe. There is no commercial history of cilastatin as a stand-alone drug product.

The drug has a slightly different mechanism of action compared with Arch’s novel drug candidate, LSALT peptide (Metablok) a non-enzymatic DPEP1 inhibitor. Whereas LSALT peptide specifically blocks DPEP1-mediated inflammation in the kidney, lungs and liver, cilastatin has off target-effects that prevent toxin uptake in the kidneys. As such, cilastatin is particularly effective for toxin-related AKI.