Latest DB-OTO Results Demonstrate Clinically Meaningful Hearing Improvements in Nearly All Children with Profound Genetic Hearing Loss in CHORD Trial

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Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

As presented at ARO, 10 of 11 children with at least one post-treatment assessment showed notable improvements in hearing

Speech and development progress followed dramatic improvements in hearing in first child treated in the trial

TARRYTOWN, N.Y., Feb. 24, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: REGN) today announced updated data for the investigational gene therapy DB-OTO from the Phase 1/2 CHORD trial in 12 children who have profound genetic hearing loss due to variants of the otoferlin (OTOF) gene. These include 72-week results showing speech and development progress in the first child dosed at 10 months of age, as well as initial results in 11 children (aged 10 months to 16 years old) – three of whom received DB-OTO bilaterally (in both ears). The latest results were presented in an oral presentation at the Association for Research in Otolaryngology’s (ARO) 48th Annual MidWinter Meeting.

“Sound is a significant part of the human experience that connects us to each other and our environment,” said Jay T. Rubinstein, M.D., Ph.D., Virginia Merrill Bloedel Professor of Otolaryngology and Bioengineering and Director, Bloedel Hearing Research Center, University of Washington School of Medicine, and a CHORD clinical trial investigator. “A year after treatment in one ear with DB-OTO, a child born profoundly deaf was able to enjoy music, engage in imaginative play and participate in bedtime reading when the cochlear implant on their other ear was removed. These seemingly small interactions are life-changing for these children as well as their families and these results continue to underscore the revolutionary promise of DB-OTO as a potential treatment for otoferlin-related hearing loss.”

In the trial, 12 participants have received DB-OTO to date – of whom nine were administered an intracochlear injection in one ear and three received it bilaterally. The surgical procedure to administer DB-OTO leverages an approach similar to cochlear implantation, which enables use in young infants.

As presented at ARO, 48-week results from the first participant dosed in the trial showed improvement of hearing to near-normal levels across key speech frequencies. This included hearing thresholds that were within normal limits (0.25-2.0 kHz) in most speech-relevant frequencies and corroborated with positive auditory brainstem responses (ABRs). Particularly encouraging were results from formal speech perception tests in which the child demonstrated improvement from week 48 to week 72 and correctly identified words – such as mommy, cookies and airplane – that were presented at a conversational level without any visual cues.