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Equillium Announces Results of the Phase 3 EQUATOR Study of Itolizumab in First-Line Treatment of Patients with Acute Graft-Versus-Host Disease

In This Article:

Treatment with itolizumab did not improve complete or overall response rates at Day 29

Itolizumab achieved statistical significance in multiple secondary endpoints demonstrating compelling clinical benefit in longer-term outcomes, including complete response at Day 99, duration of complete response and failure-free survival

Breakthrough Therapy designation and meeting requests to discuss potential for Accelerated Approval submitted to FDA, feedback expected during May 2025

Management will host a conference call and webcast today at 8:30 am ET

LA JOLLA, Calif., March 27, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Equillium, Inc. (Nasdaq: EQ), a clinical-stage biotechnology company leveraging a deep understanding of immunobiology to develop novel therapeutics to treat severe autoimmune and inflammatory disorders, today announced topline data from the Phase 3 EQUATOR study evaluating itolizumab in first-line treatment of patients with acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD). The study results did not demonstrate a meaningful difference in complete response (CR) or overall response rate (ORR) at Day 29 between patients treated with itolizumab and placebo; however, statistically significant and clinically meaningful benefit in longer-term outcomes were achieved, including complete response at Day 99, duration of complete response and failure-free survival. Itolizumab exhibited a favorable safety and tolerability profile and did not increase the risk of clinical sequelae, including infection or sepsis, primary drivers of the high mortality associated with aGVHD.

"While we did not observe improvements in Day 29 outcomes, itolizumab demonstrated compelling clinical results in several important longer-term outcomes, conferring potential patient benefit where there are no approved therapies," said Bruce Steel, chief executive officer at Equillium. "Based on these data and prior FDA guidance, we have filed for Breakthrough Therapy designation and have been granted a meeting to discuss the potential for Accelerated Approval of itolizumab for first-line treatment of aGVHD, a rare disease where one-year mortality exceeds 40 percent and itolizumab has already received Orphan Drug and Fast Track designations. We expect feedback from the FDA during May and, if positive, we would plan to submit a biologics license application during the first half of 2026."

"The longer-term outcomes are important," said Dr. John Koreth, Professor of Medicine, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School. "There are no approvals in first-line therapy for aGVHD, and no drug candidates have been able to demonstrate efficacy beyond four weeks. To demonstrate statistical significance in pre-specified endpoints of duration of complete response and failure-free survival, compared to standard of care therapy, is clinically meaningful."