Cognition Therapeutics Announces Results of Pre-specified Analysis of SHINE Study Data Presented at CTAD

In This Article:

Cognition Therapeutics, Inc.
Cognition Therapeutics, Inc.

- Results show CT1812 dramatically slowed cognitive decline in patients with lower levels of plasma p-tau217, an important biomarker of Alzheimer’s disease pathology - 

- ADAS-Cog 11 scores showed 95% slowing of decline

- MMSE scores showed 108% slowing of decline

- Pre-specified analysis from SHINE study presented by Dr. Michael Woodward at CTAD 2024

- Company hosting investor webinar on October 30, 2024 to review findings -

PURCHASE, N.Y., Oct. 29, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Cognition Therapeutics, Inc., (the “Company” or “Cognition”) (NASDAQ: CGTX), a clinical-stage company developing drugs that treat neurodegenerative disorders, presented a pre-specified analysis of data from the Phase 2 SHINE study (NCT03507790) of CT1812 in participants with mild-to-moderate Alzheimer’s disease today at the Clinical Trials on Alzheimer’s Disease (CTAD) conference.

A 95% slowing of cognitive decline as measured by ADAS-Cog 11 was experienced by participants treated with CT1812 (pooled 100mg and 300mg) who had baseline plasma p-tau217 below the median (as shown in figure 1 below). When measured by MMSE, these same participants showed a 108% slowing (as shown in figure 2 below). Placebo patients in both analyses experienced cognitive decline.

p-Tau217 is an important biomarker that has shown the ability to distinguish Alzheimer’s disease from other neurodegenerative disorders with a high degree of accuracy compared to other available biomarkers.*

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“Participants with lower levels of p-tau217 who were treated with CT1812 performed extremely well in the SHINE study. These findings are consistent with the clinical experience of the anti-amyloid immunotherapeutics, which have been reported to be more effective in people with low p-tau,” stated Michael Woodward, MD, associate professor, head of dementia research at Austin Health in Melbourne, Australia. “The degree of cognitive preservation in the CT1812-treated patients is impressive and could point to plasma p-tau217 as a predictive biomarker of robust treatment effect.”

“The evidence Dr. Woodward presented at CTAD shows that CT1812 dramatically slowed cognitive decline in patients with lower levels of plasma p-tau217. This protein is an established biomarker of Alzheimer’s disease pathology. It can be accurately detected using a commercially available blood test,” added Anthony Caggiano, MD, PhD, CMO and head of R&D.

“In SHINE, we observed that the treatment effect size appears to be widening over time. We look forward to confirming this durable effect in a longer study. We believe that identifying patients with lower levels of plasma p-tau217 will enable us to enroll participants likely to experience the most robust treatment response. We look forward to discussing these results and potential approaches to Phase 3 with the FDA in an end-of-Phase 2 meeting,” concluded Dr. Caggiano.