Kyverna Therapeutics Presents Patient Data Reinforcing Potential of KYV-101 for Treatment of Neuroinflammatory Diseases in Symposium at ECTRIMS 2024

In This Article:

Company symposium to highlight case reports from 11 patients with stiff-person syndrome, myasthenia gravis and multiple sclerosis reinforcing KYV-101's initial efficacy and safety profile and broad potential in B cell-driven neuroinflammatory diseases

Key biomarkers indicate potential for KYV-101 to durably modify neuroinflammatory diseases with immune system reset

Kyverna to present posters on design and methods for company-sponsored clinical trials in neuroinflammatory diseases

EMERYVILLE, Calif., Sept. 18, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Kyverna Therapeutics, Inc. (Kyverna), a patient-centered, clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing cell therapies for patients suffering from autoimmune diseases, today announced the presentation of three posters outlining the design and methods of Kyverna's clinical trials evaluating KYV-101 in neuroinflammatory diseases at the 40th Congress of the European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS) in Copenhagen, Denmark, taking place September 18-20, 2024. Also today, Kyverna shared case reports from its ongoing clinical trials in stiff-person syndrome, myasthenia gravis and multiple sclerosis in a company-sponsored symposium. These case reports reinforce emerging clinical data from KYV-101, with individual patient vignettes continuing to demonstrate disease modification across trials and durability in some patients extending beyond one year and a well-tolerated safety profile.

Image Credit: Kyverna Therapeutics (PRNewsfoto/Kyverna Therapeutics)
Image Credit: Kyverna Therapeutics (PRNewsfoto/Kyverna Therapeutics)

"The new data contribute to redefine treatment efficacy and support the safety profile of KYV-101," said Ralf Gold, M.D., professor of Medicine, chair of Neurology at Ruhr University Bochum, St. Josef Hospital, in Germany, and one of the presenters at the company's symposium. "By rapidly adding new data across a wide spectrum of severe neuroinflammatory diseases, we can hope to accelerate the development of potentially life-changing therapies."

"We are very proud to lead the field in understanding the impact of deep B-cell reset towards a potential paradigm shift in the treatment of neuroinflammatory diseases," said Warner Biddle, Chief Executive Officer at Kyverna. "As we continue to build on KYV-101's leading position in stiff-person syndrome and myasthenia gravis with these results, we are additionally excited by promising case reports in multiple sclerosis, which represents a significant population with high unmet need. Altogether, these results continue to reinforce the broad potential of KYV-101 to durably modify debilitating symptoms of severe neuroinflammatory diseases, and generate insights that will allow us to bring transformative CAR T treatments to even more patients."