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Immunovant Announces Two New Development Programs for Batoclimab

In This Article:

Immunovant
Immunovant
  • Plan to initiate a Pivotal Phase 2b trial in Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy (CIDP) in the second half of 20221 with initial results from open-label period 1 expected in the first half of 2024

  • Plan to initiate a Phase 2 trial in Graves’ Disease in early 2023 with initial results expected in the second half of 2023

  • Immunovant expects a robust cadence of data every half year beginning in the second half of 2023 through the first half of 2025, including multiple clinical readouts in CIDP, Graves’ Disease, Myasthenia Gravis (MG), and Thyroid Eye Disease (TED)

  • Company management will host an investor webcast today at 8 AM ET that can be accessed here.

NEW YORK, Sept. 07, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Immunovant, Inc. (Nasdaq: IMVT), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on enabling normal lives for people with autoimmune diseases, today announced plans to develop batoclimab in Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy and Graves’ Disease.

“We are excited to announce the addition of two new target indications for batoclimab, one of which will be a pivotal program, confirming our confidence in the broad development opportunity for batoclimab,” said Pete Salzmann, M.D., Chief Executive Officer of Immunovant. “Evidence suggests that both CIDP and Graves’ Disease are caused by autoantibodies and that targeting FcRn is a compelling therapeutic strategy. We believe both indications present promising opportunities ripe for innovation.”

“CIDP represents a multibillion-dollar market for IVIG and a compelling opportunity for the anti-FcRn class, as current therapies for this complex disease have meaningful safety, tolerability and logistical limitations. We have designed our pivotal Phase 2b study leveraging learnings from historical and ongoing clinical trials in this disease, with a goal to improve probability of success and effect size, while studying multiple doses for optimal differentiation,” added Bill Macias, M.D., Chief Medical Officer at Immunovant.

“With regard to Graves’ Disease, current treatments leave a meaningful proportion of patients unable to achieve normal thyroid hormone function and many remain symptomatic even when on current therapies”, said Dr Salzmann. “As a classic autoantibody condition, the straightforward biology of Graves’ Disease, from pathogenic autoantibody to altered hormones, provides solid scientific rationale for the indication, supported by anecdotal data from our Thyroid Eye Disease Phase 2b trial. By further defining the dose-response for batoclimab in Graves’ Disease, we believe our Graves’ Phase 2 trial, if successful, can meaningfully inform and de-risk a future Phase 3 trial and help bring a novel therapy to a large patient population that requires additional treatment.”