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Omeros’ Narsoplimab Meets its Pivotal Trial Primary Endpoint – Statistical Analysis Shows Survival Superiority Over External Control in Patients with TA-TMA

In This Article:

  • Primary statistical analysis of overall survival compared TA-TMA patients treated with narsoplimab in its pivotal trial to a cohort of over 100 TA-TMA patients not treated with narsoplimab in an external control stem cell transplant registry; FDA-agreed analysis was conducted by an independent external statistical group

  • Narsoplimab-treated TA-TMA patients had an over 3-fold reduction in risk of mortality (hazard ratio = 0.32 [95% confidence interval: 0.23, 0.44]; p < 0.00001) compared to similarly at-risk patients without narsoplimab treatment

  • Omeros is preparing and will resubmit a BLA to FDA for narsoplimab to become the first approved therapeutic for TA-TMA, a life-threatening complication of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation

SEATTLE, December 19, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Omeros Corporation (Nasdaq: OMER) today announced that an independent statistical group has completed the primary statistical analysis agreed with the FDA for narsoplimab, Omeros’ first-in-class monoclonal antibody inhibiting the lectin pathway of complement, in the treatment of hematopoietic stem cell transplant-associated thrombotic microangiopathy (TA-TMA), a life-threatening complication in both adult and pediatric hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). The analysis compared overall survival in the 28 TA-TMA patients in OMS721-TMA-001, Omeros’ previously conducted pivotal trial for narsoplimab in TA-TMA, to that of more than 100 similarly high-risk TA-TMA patients in an external control registry of HSCT patients who did not receive narsoplimab treatment. Narsoplimab met its primary endpoint, with OMS721-TMA-001 patients demonstrating clinically meaningful and statistically significant superiority in overall survival – a hazard ratio of 0.32 (95% confidence interval: 0.23 to 0.44) with p-value less than 0.00001 – compared to the TA-TMA registry patients. Given these results, Omeros will resubmit to FDA as soon as possible its narsoplimab Biologics License Application (BLA) for TA-TMA. Omeros aims to make narsoplimab, which targets the lectin pathway’s effector enzyme MASP-2, the first approved treatment for TA-TMA.

"The results of this comparative survival analysis for narsoplimab in TA-TMA are truly outstanding," stated Alessandro Rambaldi, M.D., Professor of Hematology at the University of Milan and Head of the Hematology and Bone Marrow Transplant Unit at ASST Papa Giovanni XXIII in Bergamo, Italy. "As an investigator in the pivotal clinical trial and having since requested and used narsoplimab in a good number of very sick TA-TMA patients through the expanded access program, we have seen first-hand the impressive benefits of narsoplimab in these high-risk patients. While we do not use C5 inhibitors in our transplant patients, nearly 50 patients in the expanded access program received narsoplimab after failing or stopping C5 inhibitors and other off-label treatments, with TA-TMA resolving with narsoplimab in 46 percent and 50 percent of these adults and children, respectively, which is quite remarkable. There is a tremendous need for an approved therapeutic for TA-TMA patients, and we are hopeful that narsoplimab will soon be made available."