Pharming announces positive topline data in pediatric clinical trial of leniolisib

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Pharming Group N.V.
Pharming Group N.V.

Multinational Phase III study is evaluating leniolisib tablets in children aged 4 to 11 years with APDS, a rare primary immunodeficiency

Data consistent with the improvements seen in the previously reported randomized controlled trial in adolescent and adult APDS patients

Global regulatory filings planned to begin in 2025

Leiden, the Netherlands, December 11, 2024: Pharming Group N.V. (“Pharming” or “the Company”) (EURONEXT Amsterdam: PHARM/Nasdaq: PHAR) announces positive topline results of data from its Phase III clinical trial (NCT05438407) evaluating the investigational drug leniolisib, an oral, selective phosphoinositide 3-kinase delta (PI3Kδ) inhibitor, in children aged 4 to 11 years with activated phosphoinositide 3-kinase delta syndrome (APDS).

Leniolisib, marketed under the brand name Joenja® in the U.S., received approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of APDS in adult and pediatric patients 12 years of age and older in March 2023. Pharming plans to include data from this 4-11-year-old trial in regulatory filings worldwide for the approval of leniolisib for pediatric patients with APDS, beginning in 2025.

Anurag Relan, MD, MPH, Chief Medical Officer of Pharming, commented:
“This is the first data from a clinical trial for younger pediatric patients with APDS, who have a significant unmet need for a disease modifying treatment. Two hallmarks of APDS, lymphoproliferation and abnormal immunophenotype, showed improvement from baseline to 12 weeks in this single arm study. More than a quarter of known APDS patients are below the age of 12, so having a potential treatment option for these patients who suffer from a progressive, serious condition could be very important. We look forward to initiating regulatory filings for these younger pediatric patients in 2025.”

The study enrolled 21 children with APDS ages 4 to 11 years at sites in the United States, Europe, and Japan. The single-arm, open-label clinical trial is evaluating the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of leniolisib. The study’s primary efficacy endpoints are a reduction in index lymph node size and an increased proportion of naïve B cells out of total B cells from baseline at 12 weeks. Secondary endpoints include an assessment of the ability of leniolisib to modify health-related quality of life based on measures of physical, social, emotional, and school functioning using a validated patient questionnaire. These endpoints mirror those used to evaluate the clinical outcomes in previous leniolisib APDS trials for patients aged 12 and older.