Ocugen Announces Positive Opinion of EMA’s Committee for Advanced Therapies for ATMP Classification for Novel Modifier Gene Therapy Candidate OCU410 for Geographic Atrophy and OCU410ST for Stargardt Disease

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MALVERN, Pa., March 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Ocugen, Inc. (Ocugen or the Company) (NASDAQ: OCGN), a pioneering biotechnology leader in gene therapies for blindness diseases, today announced that the European Commission has provided a positive opinion from the European Medicines Agency’s (EMA) Committee for Advanced Therapies (CAT) for OCU410 and OCU410ST Advanced Therapy Medicinal Product (ATMP) classification. OCU410 is a novel, multifunctional modifier gene therapy candidate being developed for the treatment of patients with vision loss due to geographic atrophy (GA)—an advanced stage of dry age-related macular degeneration (dAMD)—and OCU410ST is being developed for Stargardt disease due to ABCA4-related retinopathies.

GA affects 2-3 million people in the United States (U.S.) and Europe combined. There are two approved therapies in the U.S. that require frequent dosing (every month or every other month), however neither therapy has been approved in Europe. Stargardt disease affects 100,000 people in the U.S. and Europe combined, and there are no approved treatments available globally.

“Receiving ATMP classification for OCU410 and OCU410ST is a critical step to potentially address these severely unmet medical needs in the very near future,” said Dr. Shankar Musunuri, Chairman, CEO, and Co-founder of Ocugen. “Dosing of Phase 2 in the ongoing OCU410 ArMaDa clinical trial is complete, and we are on track to initiate the Phase 3 clinical trial next year to pursue potential Marketing Authorization Application (MAA) and Biologics License Application (BLA) filings in 2028. Last week, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) endorsed Ocugen’s plan to move forward with a Phase 2/3 pivotal confirmatory clinical trial for OCU410ST, which can be the basis of BLA and potential MAA submissions in 2027.”

ATMP classification is granted to medicines that can offer groundbreaking opportunities for the treatment of disease and accelerates the regulatory review timeline of this potential one-time gene therapy for life. Additionally, this classification allows Ocugen to interact with EMA more frequently for scientific advice and protocol assistance.

Preliminary 9-month data of OCU410 in GA patients demonstrated considerably slower lesion growth (44%) from baseline and clinically meaningful 2-line (10-letter) improvement in visual function (LLVA) in treated eyes compared to untreated eyes in the Phase 1 portion of the trial. Furthermore, a single subretinal OCU410 treatment preserves more retinal tissue around GA lesions of treated eyes at 9 months compared to published data on currently available GA therapies.