BioVie to Host Virtual KOL Event to Discuss the Phase 2 Study of Bezisterim for the Treatment of Parkinson's Disease on May 28, 2025

In This Article:

BioVie, Inc.
BioVie, Inc.

CARSON CITY, Nev., May 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- BioVie Inc. (NASDAQ: BIVI), (“BioVie” or the “Company”), a clinical-stage company developing innovative drug therapies for the treatment of neurological and neurodegenerative disorders and advanced liver disease, today announced that it will host a virtual key opinion leader (KOL) event featuring Suzanne de la Monte, MD, MPH (Brown University Warren Alpert Medical School, Providence VA Medical Center) and Mark Stacy, MD (Medical University of South Carolina College of Medicine), who will join company management to discuss the unmet need and current treatment landscape for Parkinson's disease on Wednesday, May 28, 2025 at 12:00 PM ET. To register, click here.

The event will provide an update on BioVie's Phase 2 trial (SUNRISE-PD; sunrisepd.com) evaluating bezisterim (NE3107) for the treatment of Parkinson's disease. Bezisterim is a novel, orally-administered small molecule that has been shown to reverse insulin resistance and selectively inhibit inflammation-driven ERK- and NF-κB-stimulated inflammatory mediators without inhibiting their homeostatic functions. Inflammation and the associated insulin resistance are important to the presentation of Parkinson's symptoms. BioVie is currently enrolling patients recently diagnosed with Parkinson's disease who have not yet begun treatment in order to measure bezisterim’s potential impact on clinical signs and effects on biomarkers that may correlate with disease-modification for the SUNRISE-PD trial.

A live question and answer session will follow the formal presentations.

About Suzanne de la Monte, MD, MPH
Suzanne de la Monte, MD, MPH is Professor in Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Neurology, & Neurosurgery at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University and Chief of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine at the Providence VA Medical Center. Dr. de la Monte is also a medical staff member at the Rhode Island Hospital and Women and Infants Hospital of Rhode Island and formerly a research fellow at the National Institutes of Health. She received residency training in Anatomic and Pediatric Pathology at Johns Hopkins and fellowship training in Neuropathology at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). Dr. de la Monte leads programs in basic, translational, and clinical research on mechanisms and the neurological consequences of brain insulin resistance and metabolic dysfunction, and coined the term ‘Type 3 Diabetes’ which refers to the hypothesis that insulin resistance in the brain causes neurodegenerative disorders. She has over 300 peer-reviewed articles published.