Cocrystal Pharma’s Co-CEOs Highlight Pioneering Approach to Antiviral Drug Candidates Targeting Influenza and Coronaviruses as Fall Flu and COVID Season Begins

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Cocrystal Pharma, Inc.
Cocrystal Pharma, Inc.

The Company’s antiviral candidate for seasonal and pandemic influenza shows in vitro activity against the avian influenza A PB2 protein, whereas current influenza vaccines offer no protection against pandemic avian influenza

BOTHELL, Wash., Oct. 31, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- As the fall seasonal influenza and COVID season gets underway in the Northern Hemisphere, Cocrystal Pharma, Inc. (Nasdaq: COCP) (“Cocrystal” or the “Company”) highlights the ability of the Company’s innovative structure-based drug discovery platform technology to discover and develop novel broad-spectrum antivirals therapeutics to treat a wide range of viral diseases, including newly emerging pandemic strains such as recent H5N1 avian influenza identified in the US.

“As our nation enters the fall flu and COVID season and learns of the emerging highly pathogenic avian H5N1 influenza A strain in dairy cattle and humans, the need for more effective antivirals is clear. Current flu vaccines are developed for seasonal influenza strains, not for pandemic avian influenza strains. Also, treatment-emergent resistance to approved antivirals and transmission of resistant viruses has been a challenging issue,” said Sam Lee, PhD, President and co-CEO of Cocrystal. “For example, the widespread oseltamivir (Tamiflu®) resistance of the pandemic avian influenza strains could create a serous public health situation. Clearly, there continues to be an unmet need for therapeutics with a high barrier to resistance.

“We believe our approach makes it possible to develop highly effective therapeutics for noroviruses, coronaviruses and influenza A because we target the highly conserved, essential function of viral enzymes, regardless of whether the strain is seasonal or pandemic,” he added. “We recently revealed the high-resolution cocrystal structure of the avian influenza PB2 protein complexed with CC-42344, further confirming that our PB2 inhibitor CC-42344 binds to its highly conserved PB2 region, indicating activity against this strain.”

Cocrystal’s platform utilizes Nobel Prize-winning technology to develop a new class of direct-acting antivirals that work against enzymes that are essential for viral replication. The Company is evaluating its oral CC-42344 in a Phase 2a study in healthy subjects infected with a seasonal influenza A strain. Topline safety and tolerability results from this trial are expected by the end of 2024, and preparations are underway for an Investigational New Drug (IND) application to conduct a late-stage clinical study with CC-42344 in the U.S.