Capricor Therapeutics Announces Completion of Mid-Cycle Review Meeting with FDA on Deramiocel for the Treatment of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Cardiomyopathy

In This Article:

Capricor Therapeutics
Capricor Therapeutics

-Company remains on track for PDUFA target action date of August 31, 2025-

-Advisory committee meeting to be held in advance of target action date-  

SAN DIEGO, May 05, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) --  Capricor Therapeutics (NASDAQ: CAPR), a biotechnology company developing transformative cell and exosome-based therapeutics for the treatment of rare diseases, today announced the completion of a mid-cycle review meeting with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the Company’s Biologics License Application (BLA) seeking full approval for deramiocel, an investigational cell therapy, as a treatment for patients diagnosed with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) cardiomyopathy. During the meeting, FDA stated that no significant deficiencies have been identified by the Review Committee and that the package is on track for a Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) action date of August 31, 2025. The FDA has also confirmed its intent to hold an advisory committee meeting, although an official date has not yet been set.

“The successful completion of our mid-cycle review meeting along with the upcoming advisory committee meeting represents major milestones on the path towards approval of deramiocel,” said Linda Marbán, Ph.D., Chief Executive Officer of Capricor. “Deramiocel is a first-in-class cellular therapy with the potential to halt or slow the progression of DMD-cardiomyopathy, and we are pleased to have the opportunity to present the efficacy and safety data to the advisory committee. We have been actively preparing for an advisory committee meeting, and we look forward to providing the physician and patient perspectives to highlight the weight of evidence supporting the transformative potential of deramiocel in treating DMD-cardiomyopathy.”

The BLA submission is supported by Capricor’s cardiac data from its Phase 2 HOPE-2 and HOPE-2 Open Label Extension (OLE) trials compared to patient level data from an FDA-funded and published dataset on the natural history of DMD-cardiomyopathy and potential biomarkers of disease progression. Efficacy from the ongoing HOPE-3 study is not part of this BLA package submission.

About Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

DMD is a devastating genetic disorder characterized by progressive weakness and chronic inflammation of the skeletal, heart and respiratory muscles with mortality at a median age of approximately 30 years. It is estimated that DMD occurs in approximately one in every 3,500 male births and that the patient population is estimated to be approximately 15,000-20,000 in the United States. DMD pathophysiology is driven by the impaired production of functional dystrophin, which normally functions as a structural protein in muscle. The reduction of functional dystrophin in muscle cells leads to significant cell damage and ultimately causes muscle cell death and fibrotic replacement. In DMD patients, heart muscle cells progressively die and are replaced with scar tissue. This cardiomyopathy eventually leads to heart failure, which is currently the leading cause of death among those with DMD. Treatment options are limited and there is no cure.