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Immuron Announces Travelan® Clinical Trial Update

In This Article:

Immuron Limited
Immuron Limited

Highlights:

  • Travelan® (IMM-124E) Phase 2 Clinical Study Report submitted to the FDA

  • Travelan® (IMM-124E) Phase 2 Clinical Study Statistically Significant Immunology Results

  • Travelan® (IMM-124E) Phase 2 Clinical Study Statistically Significant Microbiome Responses

  • Travelan® P2TD (n=866) Uniformed Services University field study randomized 776 subjects

MELBOURNE, Australia, Jan. 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Immuron Limited (ASX: IMC; NASDAQ: IMRN), an Australian based and globally integrated biopharmaceutical company is pleased to announce that it has submitted the Clinical Study Report to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the recently completed Phase 2 study and will soon request an end of Phase 2 meeting which is a pre-cursor to proceeding to Phase 3.

Travelan® (IMM-124E) Phase 2 Clinical Study
NCT05933525: A Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled Trial Assessing the Efficacy of IMM-124E (Travelan®) in a Controlled Human Infection Model for Enterotoxigenic Escherichia Coli (ETEC)

Immunology
Statistically significant lower levels of IgA and IgG were observed for the subjects who received Travelan® compared to those who received the placebo, which may also reflect levels of exposure to ETEC antigen. Travelan® antibodies target and bind to ETEC antigen in the gastrointestinal tract, block LPS epitopes and therefore reduce antigen exposure, resulting in lower overall IgA and IgG antibody titers.
Clinical data also demonstrated there was a statistically significant reduction in the number of colony forming units (CFUs) in the stools of subjects who received Travelan® (p =0.0121), measured 48 hours post challenge, indicating faster clearance of the challenge strain from the GI tract.

Microbiome
Participants in the Travelan® group have a more stable gastrointestinal microbiota over the treatment time period when compared with the Placebo group. Alpha diversity, a measurement of the richness (how many different species) and evenness (abundance or number of different species) revealed that the Travelan group had improved richness and Shannon diversity results compared to the Placebo group. The data indicated a difference in the richness in the diversity of certain species rather than just the abundance or number of bacterial species between the two groups.

Statistically significant differences were identified between the two treatment groups in the Beta diversity tests (number of species and abundance). The relative abundance results revealed that the Travelan group had increased levels of beneficial bacteria such as Akkermansia and Faecalibacterium. The differential abundance results confirmed increases in Agathobaculum, Slackia the Eubacterium eligens group, and the Eubacterium siraeum group; and decreases in Rumminococcus and Bacteroides. The abundance data indicates a possible link between the species of bacteria associated with reduced inflammation.