Daré Bioscience Announces Publication in Sexual Medicine of Positive Findings from Demographic, Behavioral and Medication Use Subgroup Analyses in the Phase 2b RESPOND Clinical Study of Sildenafil Cream, 3.6%

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Daré Bioscience, Inc.
Daré Bioscience, Inc.

Published data show that age and use of hormonal contraception did not impact the efficacy of Sildenafil Cream

SAN DIEGO, Dec. 10, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Daré Bioscience, Inc. (NASDAQ: DARE), a leader in innovation for the health and wellbeing of women, today announced that additional data from the exploratory Phase 2b RESPOND clinical study of Sildenafil Cream, 3.6%, an investigational topical cream formulation of sildenafil being developed as an on-demand treatment for female sexual arousal disorder (FSAD), has been published by Sexual Medicine, an official publication of the International Society for Sexual Medicine.

Publication Details:

Johnson, et al. “Impact of age, race, and medication use on efficacy endpoints in a randomized controlled trial of topical sildenafil cream for the treatment of female sexual arousal disorder.” Sexual Medicine, Volume 12, Issue 5, October 2024. https://doi.org/10.1093/sexmed/qfae079

“We believe that these data are an indication of the broad population of premenopausal women with FSAD who could potentially benefit from treatment with Sildenafil Cream,” said Sabrina Martucci Johnson, President and CEO of Daré Bioscience. “We were pleased to see that age and race did not significantly impact response to Sildenafil Cream.”

“This analysis also explored other subgroups such as hormonal contraceptive users versus non-users,” said Dr. Annie Thurman, MD, FACOG, Medical Director at Daré Bioscience. “Since hormonal contraceptive use has been associated with lower sexual desire as well as reduced sexual arousal in other studies, we wanted to understand how this medication use might impact the effect of Sildenafil Cream. Our data show, however, that there was no significant impact from hormonal contraceptive use on either the primary or secondary efficacy endpoints, so we were also pleased to see that hormonal contraceptive users could also potentially benefit from Sildenafil Cream.”

The exploratory Phase 2b RESPOND study was specifically designed to identify the patient population that experienced the most meaningful improvement from Sildenafil Cream and the questions to ask them, or the patient-reported outcome (PRO) measures, that best reflect that improvement. The subset analyses published by Sexual Medicine compared efficacy endpoints based on study product use in pre-planned and post-hoc subsets of age, race, and medication use to help refine target populations in future studies of Sildenafil Cream, 3.6% for the treatment of FSAD. As previously announced, safety and efficacy data from the Phase 2b RESPOND study have been published in The Journal of Sexual Medicine and Obstetrics & Gynecology, respectively: