Cocrystal Pharma Reports 2024 Financial Results and Provides Updates on its Antiviral Drug-Development Programs

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Cocrystal Pharma, Inc.
Cocrystal Pharma, Inc.

BOTHELL, Wash., March 31, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Cocrystal Pharma, Inc. (Nasdaq: COCP) (“Cocrystal” or the “Company”) reports financial results for the 12 months ended December 31, 2024, and provides updates on its antiviral product pipeline, upcoming milestones and business activities.

“Our novel, potent antiviral compounds for norovirus, influenza and coronavirus address critical gaps in global health where effective treatments or vaccines are currently lacking,” said Sam Lee, Ph.D., President and co-CEO of Cocrystal. “We plan to initiate a norovirus human challenge study in the U.S. later this year to evaluate our pan-viral protease inhibitor CDI-988 for the potential treatment and prevention of norovirus infection. The big surge in reported norovirus outbreaks is possibly due to norovirus variants switching from GII.4 to GII.17, as well as increased social gathering after the COVID-19 pandemic. Norovirus is the most common cause of acute gastroenteritis and there are no approved therapeutics or vaccines, making it a compelling target.

“We are optimistic that our oral PB2 inhibitor CC-42344 will have potential as a treatment for seasonal influenza A infection and pandemic avian influenza,” he added. “Following the unexpected low infection rate from the Phase 2a challenge study that precluded us from obtaining meaningful human efficacy data, we plan to continue the influenza challenge study.”

“News coverage in recent months of norovirus and avian flu outbreaks underscore the urgent need for new antiviral solutions,” said James Martin, CFO and co-CEO of Cocrystal. “We are advancing our first- and best-in-class antiviral drug compounds that were designed using our Nobel Prize-winning structure-based technologies for these high-value viral targets that address multibillion-dollar markets.”

Antiviral Product Pipeline Overview

We apply our proprietary structure-based drug discovery platform technology for developing broad-spectrum antivirals that inhibit viral replication. By designing and selecting candidates that target highly conserved regions of the viral enzymes, we seek to develop drugs that are effective against the virus and mutations of the virus, while reducing off-target interactions that may cause undesirable side effects. Our drug discovery process differs from traditional, empirical medicinal chemistry approaches that often require iterative high-throughput compound screening and lengthy hit-to-lead processes.

Influenza Programs

Influenza is a major global health threat that may become more challenging to treat due to the emergence of highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses and resistance to approved influenza antivirals. Each year there are approximately 1 billion cases of seasonal influenza worldwide, 3-5 million severe illnesses and up to 650,000 deaths. On average, about 8% of the U.S. population contracts influenza each season. In addition to the health risk, influenza is responsible for an estimated $11.2 billion in direct and indirect costs in the U.S. annually.