Brii Bio Presents Late-Breaking Data from Its Ongoing Phase 2 ENSURE Study at EASL Congress 2025, Suggesting BRII-179's Role in Advancing Higher HBsAg Loss

In This Article:

  • End of treatment (EOT) data from Cohort 4 of the ENSURE study suggest that patients responding to prior BRII-179 treatment achieved faster and higher rate of surface antigen clearance with curative treatments compared to BRII-179 naïve participants, strengthening the case for a novel enrichment strategy, utilizing BRII-179 to identify and prime patients for improved functional cure outcomes

  • 24 Week follow-up results from Cohorts 1-3 of the ENSURE study demonstrated sustained off-treatment benefits of elebsiran + PEG-IFNα combination therapy vs PEG-IFNα alone

DURHAM, N.C. and BEIJING, May 8, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Brii Biosciences Limited ("Brii Bio" or the "Company", stock code: 2137.HK), a biotechnology company developing therapies to improve patient health and choice across diseases with high unmet medical need, today announced data from its ongoing Phase 2 ENSURE study as late-breaking posters at the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) Congress 2025 in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

(PRNewsfoto/Brii Biosciences Limited)
(PRNewsfoto/Brii Biosciences Limited)

ENSURE (NCT05970289) is a multicenter, open-label Phase 2 study. Cohorts 1-3 were designed to evaluate the contribution of elebsiran, an investigational small interfering ribonucleic acid (siRNA), to the combination treatment with pegylated interferon alpha (PEG-IFNα) in participants with chronic HBV infection with baseline hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) of 100-3,000 IU/mL.

Cohort 4 enrolled participants who completed 9 doses of BRII-179, a recombinant protein-based therapeutic vaccine, in combination with elebsiran in a previous APAC study BRII-179-835-001 (NCT04749368) to receive elebsiran and PEG-IFNα combination treatment. These participants were grouped based on their anti-HBs response induced by prior BRII-179 treatment: those with peak anti-HBs titers ≥ 10 IU/L are defined as anti-HBs responders, and those with peak anti-HBs titers < 10 IU/L as non-responders. The design of Cohort 4 as part of this study was based on the insight that BRII-179 could differentiate between immune responders and non-responders, offering the potential to predict future response to therapy.

Interim data from Cohort 4 showed that anti-HBs responders achieved a substantially higher rate of HBsAg seroclearance than non-responders. At EOT (Week 48), 61% (11/18) of anti-HBs responders achieved HBsAg seroclearance, compared to 10% (1/10) of non-responders. Among the 11 anti-HBs responders who achieved HBsAg loss, 91% (10/11) had anti-HBs titers ≥ 100 IU/L at EOT.