PepGen Announces Update to Phase 2 CONNECT2-EDO51 Study in Patients with DMD

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Company will temporarily pause CONNECT2 and focus efforts on ongoing CONNECT1-EDO51 study of PGN-EDO51 in DMD, with 10 mg/kg results expected in the third quarter of 2025

No new safety issues have been observed in PGN-EDO51 program

BOSTON, March 04, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--PepGen Inc. (Nasdaq: PEPG), a clinical-stage biotechnology company advancing the next generation of oligonucleotide therapies with the goal of transforming the treatment of severe neuromuscular and neurological diseases, today announced its voluntary decision to temporarily pause the Phase 2 CONNECT2-EDO51 study of PGN-EDO51 in patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) until the Company can review results from the 10 mg/kg cohort in the ongoing Phase 2 CONNECT1-EDO51 study. The first two cohorts of the CONNECT1 study are fully enrolled and data from the 10 mg/kg cohort are expected during the third quarter of 2025. No new safety issues related to PGN-EDO51 have been observed since the Company’s last safety update as of January 23, 2025.

"With our 10 mg/kg cohort of CONNECT1 study fully enrolled and data expected later this year, we decided to pause CONNECT2 until we are able to review results from the 10 mg/kg cohort in patients with DMD. This will allow us to gather additional safety data, assess the impact of this dose of PGN-EDO51 on dystrophin levels, and potentially improve the design of CONNECT2," said James McArthur, PhD, President and CEO of PepGen. "This decision enables us to focus resources on completing CONNECT1, as well as rapidly advancing our FREEDOM studies in myotonic dystrophy type 1 with PGN-EDODM1, in which we recently reported encouraging initial clinical data from the Phase 1 FREEDOM-DM1 study."

About PGN-EDO51

PGN-EDO51, PepGen's investigational candidate in development for the treatment of DMD, utilizes the Company's proprietary Enhanced Delivery Oligonucleotide (EDO) technology to deliver a therapeutic oligonucleotide that is designed to target the root cause of this devastating disease. PGN-EDO51 is designed to skip exon 51 of the dystrophin transcript, an established therapeutic target for approximately 13% of DMD patients, thereby aiming to restore the open reading frame and enabling the production of a truncated, yet functional dystrophin protein. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted PGN-EDO51 both Orphan Drug and Rare Pediatric Disease Designations for the treatment of patients with DMD amenable to an exon 51-skipping approach.

About the CONNECT Clinical Program

CONNECT1-EDO51 is an open-label, multiple ascending dose Phase 2 trial being conducted in Canada. CONNECT1 has enrolled two cohorts of boys and young men living with DMD amenable to exon 51 skipping and its endpoints include safety and tolerability, dystrophin production, exon skipping, and muscle tissue concentration. The 10 mg/kg cohort is fully enrolled (n=4) and participants in the 5 mg/kg cohort (n=3) are continuing to dose at that level in the long-term extension phase of the study. The Company has received communication from Health Canada that dosing of patients in the 5 and 10 mg/kg cohorts may continue at their current dose levels and has requested additional information from the Company to address Health Canada’s safety concerns before any further dose escalation or enrollment of any additional participants at the current dose levels. The Company is working with Health Canada to address its questions.