Disc Medicine Presents Positive Updated Results from Phase 1b Trial in Patients with Myelofibrosis (MF) and Anemia in an Oral Presentation at the 66th American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting

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Disc Medicine Inc
Disc Medicine Inc
  • Demonstrated durable hematologic response across all patient subgroups, regardless of baseline transfusion status and concomitant JAK inhibitor therapy

  • Phase 2 study in MF anemia has been initiated, enrolling a broad range of patient types

WATERTOWN, Mass., Dec. 08, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Disc Medicine, Inc. (NASDAQ:IRON), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on the discovery, development, and commercialization of novel treatments for patients suffering from serious hematologic diseases, today presented positive updated results from a Phase 1b trial of DISC-0974 in patients with myelofibrosis (MF) and anemia. The data, presented in an oral session at the 2024 American Society of Hematology (ASH) annual meeting in San Diego, CA, demonstrated that treatment with DISC-0974 results in substantial reductions in hepcidin and increases in iron levels translating to positive impact on clinically meaningful measures of anemia across a broad range of patient types.

“With the presentation of this expanded data set from our phase 1b study, we are encouraged by the continued demonstration of robust hematologic activity of DISC-0974, including durable hemoglobin increases in all patient subgroups and meaningful reductions in transfusion burden. Importantly, we observed strong responses regardless of patients’ baseline transfusion burden or concomitant use of JAK inhibitors,” said John Quisel, JD, PhD, President and Chief Executive Officer of Disc Medicine. “With this data in hand, I’m pleased to announce that we have now started a phase 2 trial in myelofibrosis patients with anemia.”

This Phase 1b multi-center, open-label study, enrolled 35 adult patients with MF and anemia, including patients who were: non-transfusion dependent receiving no transfusions (nTD, n=23), transfusion dependent with low transfusion burden (TD Low, n=5) and transfusion dependent with high transfusion burden (TD High, n=7). The trial was comprised of both patients receiving concomitant JAK inhibitor therapy (n=13) and not receiving JAK inhibitor therapy (n=22). DISC-0974 was administered subcutaneously at 14 mg (n=1), 28 mg (n=7), 50 mg (n=12), 75 mg (n=9), or 100 mg (n=6) every 4 weeks for up to 6 treatments. Results demonstrated:

  • Consistent, substantial decreases in hepcidin reaching >75% reduction from baseline and corresponding increases in serum iron across patients, which translated to increased levels of reticulocyte hemoglobin and hemoglobin

  • 68% of baseline nTD patients achieved a hemoglobin increase of ≥1.5 g/dL during study period and 50% had sustained increases for ≥12 weeks

  • 100% of TD patients with 1-2 transfusions within a 12-week period at baseline (TD Low) achieved a ≥50% reduction in transfusion requirement

    • 80% of TD Low patients achieved transfusion independence (TI) over a 16-week period

  • 60% of TD patients with 3-12 transfusions within a 12-week period at baseline (TD High) achieved a ≥50% reduction in transfusion requirement

    • 40% of TD High patients achieved transfusion independence over a 12-week period

  • 54% of patients receiving concomitant JAK inhibitor therapy achieved a major hematologic response

  • DISC-0974 was generally well-tolerated at all evaluated dose levels. Diarrhea was the only adverse event (AE) that was considered related to DISC-0974 and reported in two or more subjects. The majority of AEs were not considered related to DISC-0974.