Lineage Presents Preclinical Data on Its Auditory Neuronal Cell Transplant Program, ReSonance™, at the 59th Annual Inner Ear Biology Workshop

In This Article:

  • ReSonance is Manufactured by a Proprietary Process, Developed In-House, at Clinical Scale, with Relevant In-Vitro Functional Activity

  • Immediate-Use, Thaw-and-Inject Formulation Durably Engrafted in Multiple Preclinical Hearing Loss Models

  • ReSonance is Currently Being Evaluated in a Functional Model of Hearing Loss

CARLSBAD, Calif., September 18, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Lineage Cell Therapeutics, Inc. (NYSE American and TASE: LCTX), a clinical-stage biotechnology company developing allogeneic cell therapies for unmet medical needs, today reported that preclinical results with ReSonance (ANP1), the Company’s auditory neuronal cell transplant for the treatment of hearing loss, were presented at the 59th Annual Inner Ear Biology Workshop by Ofer Wiser, Ph.D. Senior Scientist, Technological Innovation at Cell Cure Neurosciences, Inc., the Company’s Israel-based subsidiary, which is responsible for research, process development, and good manufacturing practice (GMP) production.

"We are excited to report on the continued successful pre-clinical development of ReSonance, our first internally-developed cell transplant program, which we believe illustrates the efficiency and breadth of our technology platform," stated Brian Culley, Lineage CEO. "Building on the success of our OpRegen® RPE cell transplant candidate for dry AMD, our process development team generated new methods of differentiation which enabled us to create a new product candidate for hearing loss. We advanced from a product concept through the successful manufacture of the desired and specific cell type, generating new intellectual property, and thereafter advancing ANP1 into initial preclinical testing. An inherent aspect of our successful manufacturing efforts was the generation of a cryopreserved, ready to administer thaw-and-inject formulation at a clinically testable dose, which demonstrated successful engraftment and survival in a preclinical hearing loss model. Given the many challenges of reliably and affordably manufacturing cell and gene therapy product candidates, we are excited to highlight the progress Lineage has made in this area and believe our unique manufacturing capabilities will continue to provide us with a leading position in the cell transplant space."

Hearing loss is a significant unmet medical need and by 2050, nearly 2.5 billion people are estimated to be impacted by listening impairments across the globe. The loss of auditory nerve cells can lead to auditory neuropathy, even when hair cells and the cochlear nucleus remain intact. A cell-based therapy designed to replace lost or dysfunctional auditory neurons may restore hearing and enhance the degree of success of a cochlear implant procedure by repopulating the cochlea with transplanted, functional auditory neurons.