Kinarus Therapeutics Announces Discontinuation of the Phase 2 KINETIC Study of KIN001 in Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients Following a Prespecified Interim Analysis of Efficacy and Safety

Kinarus Therapeutic Holding AG
Kinarus Therapeutic Holding AG
  • KINETIC, a Phase 2 clinical study of KIN001, an oral drug combination, to be discontinued following recommendation of the DSMB

  • KIN001 was shown to be safe and well tolerated

  • Enrollment in the Phase 2 KINFAST study in ambulatory COVID-19 patients continues

  • Data have no impact on plans to develop KIN001 for wet AMD, IPF or other indications

Basel, Switzerland, 30.09.2022 2022. Kinarus Therapeutics Holding AG (SIX: KNRS) (“Kinarus”), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing novel therapeutics to treat viral, respiratory, and ophthalmic diseases, today announced that the independent Data and Safety Monitoring Board (“DSMB”) has completed its prespecified data review for the Phase 2 KINETIC study in hospitalized COVID-19 patients, and has recommended discontinuation of the study.

The DSMB concluded that there is low probability to show statistically significant benefit with a reasonable number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients, in light of the lower than anticipated incidence of the primary endpoint due to evolution of the current treatment landscape. It therefore recommends that the KINETIC study be discontinued.

Safety data from KINETIC study indicate a favorable profile, with a balanced incidence of treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) between study groups.

“While it is disappointing that KIN001 has not shown sufficient signs of efficacy in the KINETIC study, it is important to remember that hospitalized COVID-19 patients have severe disease with highly complicated pathophysiology. As many of our peers have learned since the beginning of the pandemic, it has become challenging to show the impact of therapeutic intervention at the current pandemic stage, given the disease characteristics in COVID-19 patients with severe disease. Moreover, there are also now relatively smaller numbers of patients that meet enrolment criteria, since fewer patients require hospitalization, in contrast to the situation earlier in the pandemic,” said Dr Thierry Fumeaux, Chief Medical Officer of Kinarus.

“For these reasons, we are continuing to study KIN001 as planned in KINFAST, a second Phase 2 study in ambulatory COVID-19 patients who are not hospitalized” remarked Dr Fumeaux. “The goal of KINFAST is to reduce the time to recovery, as well as the severity of disease in mild to moderate symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 positive individuals. Currently, the course of COVID-19 in the majority of patients does not require hospitalization, with consequences for the single patient but also for society. This substantially increases the treatable population and, therefore, the potential for a significant benefit on this clinically and pharmacoeconomically relevant outcome.”