Humacyte Announces Presentation of Positive Results from V007 Phase 3 AV Access Clinical Trial at the American Society of Nephrology’s Kidney Week 2024

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Humacyte, Inc
Humacyte, Inc

– ATEV™ demonstrated superiority at six and 12 months (co-primary endpoints) compared to autogenous fistula, the current standard of care for hemodialysis access –

- ATEV also showed superior function and patency in female, obese and diabetic patients, subgroups with historically poor outcomes with autogenous fistula procedures -

DURHAM, N.C., Oct. 28, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Humacyte, Inc. (Nasdaq: HUMA), a clinical-stage biotechnology platform company developing universally implantable, bioengineered human tissue at commercial scale, announced the presentation of positive results from the V007 Phase 3 clinical trial of the acellular tissue engineered vessel (ATEV) in arteriovenous (AV) access for patients with end-stage renal disease at the American Society of Nephrology’s (ASN) Kidney Week 2024, the premier nephrology meeting, in San Diego.

In the Phase 3 trial, the ATEV demonstrated superior function and patency at six and 12 months (co-primary endpoints) compared to autogenous fistula, which is the current standard of care for hemodialysis patients, and also showed superior function and patency in female, obese and diabetic patients, each of which is a high-need subgroup with historically poor outcomes with AV fistula procedures. The late-breaking podium presentation, titled “Prospective Randomized Trial of Humacyte's Acellular Tissue Engineered Vessel Versus Autologous Arteriovenous Fistula for Hemodialysis Access,” was presented on Saturday, October 26, 2024 by Mohamad A. Hussain, MD, PhD, RPVI, FAHA, FRCSC, FACS, Vascular and Endovascular Surgeon-Scientist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Core Faculty at the Center for Surgery and Public Health, and Assistant Professor of Surgery at Harvard Medical School.

“These results show that availability of the ATEV, a biologic conduit, could be game changing in improving arteriovenous access in many hemodialysis patients,” said Dr. Hussain. “I was particularly pleased to see positive results in female, obese, and diabetic patients, groups which typically have poor outcomes with autogenous fistula procedures and historically limited treatment alternatives for hemodialysis access. The significantly higher duration of access over one year in these underserved patients could greatly reduce reliance on catheters for arteriovenous access.”

The V007 Phase 3 trial (NCT03183245) is a prospective, multi-center, randomized clinical study in 242 hemodialysis patients in the United States. Enrolled individuals were randomly assigned to receive either the ​​ATEV or an AV fistula for hemodialysis access and are being followed for up to 24 months. Under the statistical analysis plan for the trial, the primary efficacy assessment compared functional patency (usability for hemodialysis access) at six months and secondary patency (blood flow through the conduit) at 12 months, as co-primary endpoints. At six months, 81.3% of the patients implanted with the ATEV had functional patency compared to 66.4% of the patients receiving an AV fistula. At 12 months, 68.3% of the patients implanted with the ATEV had secondary patency, compared to 62.2% of the patients receiving an AV fistula. The joint test for superiority of the ATEV versus AV fistula at six and 12 months was statistically significant (p=0.0071). Patients receiving an ATEV also achieved a significantly longer duration of hemodialysis over the first 12 months, as compared to AV fistula (p=0.0162).