Eledon Pharmaceuticals Announces Use of Tegoprubart as Key Component of Immunosuppression Regimen in its Second Transplant of a Genetically Modified Pig Kidney into a Human

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Eledon Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Eledon Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Patient treated in procedure, conducted at Mass General Transplant Center and in collaboration with partner eGenesis, was recently released from hospital

Investigational therapy tegoprubart targets CD40 ligand (CD40L) with potential to improve both safety and efficacy compared to standard of care immunosuppression regimens

IRVINE, Calif., Feb. 07, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Eledon Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (“Eledon”) (Nasdaq: ELDN) today announced that tegoprubart, the company’s investigational anti-CD40L antibody, was used as a key component of the immunosuppression therapy regimen in a patient who recently received a transplanted kidney from a genetically modified pig. The procedure was performed on January 25, 2025, by surgeons at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) in collaboration with our partner eGenesis. In December 2024, MGH received Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval to proceed with this transplant and plans to perform two additional xenotransplants this year, further advancing the field of xenotransplantation. Following the successful transplant, the patient was discharged from the hospital and is now off dialysis for the first time in over two years.

“This second kidney xenotransplant conducted at MGH represents another important milestone in the effort to consider new strategies in transplantation and immunosuppression to address the global organ shortage crisis. We are grateful to the patient, the team at MGH, and our partner eGenesis for supporting tegoprubart’s central role in these landmark procedures,” said David-Alexandre C. Gros, M.D., Eledon Chief Executive Officer. “Blocking the CD40 Ligand is a critical component of the immunosuppression regimen for effective translation of organ transplant from nonhuman primates into humans. Our anti-CD40L antibody tegoprubart represents a novel approach to immunosuppression therapy with the potential to improve safety and efficacy and enable patients to live longer with their transplanted organs.”

Similar to the first-ever kidney xenotransplant, also conducted at MGH in March 2024, tegoprubart is being administered to the current patient investigationally as part of a regimen designed to prevent the body from rejecting the transplanted pig organ. Tegoprubart is designed to block CD40L and has been shown to inhibit multiple costimulatory receptors including CD40 and CD11, key components of how immune cells communicate with one another. Based on extensive prior research, tegoprubart has been observed to be generally safe and well-tolerated in multiple potential indications, including for the prevention of rejection following kidney allotransplantation.