Enlivex Announces Positive Interim Data Readout from a Phase I/II Trial Evaluating Allocetra in End-Stage Knee Osteoarthritis

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Enlivex Therapeutics Ltd
Enlivex Therapeutics Ltd

Key Highlights

  • Enrolled patients with severe knee osteoarthritis who were indicated for knee-replacement surgery received a single local injection of AllocetraTM into the knee as a “last resort”

  • Three-month data readout showed a significant reduction in pain and a favorable safety profile

    • Pain reduction: patients reported an average pain reduction of 64% from baseline

    • Complete Pain Resolution: 33% of patients reported complete pain relief, from an average pain level of 9 to a pain level of 0; pain scale used in the study ranged from 0 (no pain) to 10 (maximum pain)

    • Avoidance of Surgery: 89% of patients did not proceed with knee replacement surgery at three months post-injection

    • Safety: No severe adverse events related to Allocetra™ were reported

Ness-Ziona, Israel, June 17, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Enlivex Therapeutics Ltd. (Nasdaq: ENLV, the "Company"), a clinical-stage macrophage reprogramming immunotherapy company, today released a positive interim data readout from a Phase I/II investigator-initiated clinical trial of AllocetraTM in patients with end-stage knee osteoarthritis who had been indicated for knee replacement surgery.

In this study, patients with end-stage knee osteoarthritis are offered a single AllocetraTM injection to the knee as a potential “last resort” alternative for pain resolution and knee functionality in lieu of knee-replacement surgery. A total of nine patients have been enrolled and treated with a single AllocetraTM injection to the knee and evaluated for at least three months following treatment. Patients reported pain using a scale of zero (0, representing no pain) to ten (10, representing maximum pain).

At the three-month follow up, a substantial reduction (64%) in average reported pain was observed compared to baseline (Figure 1), with 89% (8/9) of treated patients reporting an improvement in their knee pain compared to their baseline pain prior to treatment, and 33% (3/9) of the patients reporting complete pain relief from an average pain level of 9 to a pain level of 0.

During the three-month period post injection of AllocetraTM, only a single patient (1/9, 11%) decided to move forward with knee-replacement surgery, while 89% (8/9) of the patients decided not to proceed with such surgery.

In all cases, dosing was successfully completed, and no severe related adverse events were reported following treatment.

The investigator-initiated trial is led by Amir Oron, M.D., a senior specialist in Orthopedics and Chief of Hand Surgery and Microsurgery at the Kaplan Medical Center in Rehovot, Israel. Dr. Oron stated, "I am pleased with the interim results of this innovative trial, demonstrating the safety of an AllocetraTM injection to the knee in nine patients with severe end-stage knee osteoarthritis. The initial signal of response to the AllocetraTM injection is encouraging, especially as these patients have attempted multiple other treatments with no lasting improvement. These patients have severe osteoarthritis of the knee and need better treatment options to replace or delay progression to extensive surgery.”