PHAXIAM Therapeutics Receives FDA Clearance to Initiate Phase II GLORIA Study in the U.S.

In This Article:

Phaxiam Therapeutics S.A.
Phaxiam Therapeutics S.A.
  • GLORIA, the world's 1st phase II phage therapy study in the treatment of Prosthetic Joint Infections (PJI) related to Staphylococcus aureus

  • The clinical protocol also being submitted to the European health authorities and the MHRA in the UK

  • Patients recruitment scheduled to start in Q1 2025 for clinical data readout expected in Q3 2026

Lyon (France), November 04, 2024 – 6:00 pm CET - PHAXIAM Therapeutics (Euronext: PHXM - FR0011471135), a biopharmaceutical company developing innovative treatments for severe and resistant bacterial infections, announces that it has received Investigational New Drug approval (IND) for its Phase II study, GLORIA, in Prosthetic Joint Infections (PJI) caused by Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus). 

The GLORIA study is PHAXIAM's most strategic asset, with the highest priority. This study will be the 1st worldwide (Europe and United States) multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled, proof-of-concept study in phage therapy and in PJI. The study plans to include 100 patients with PJI (hip or knee replacement) with open surgical debridement (DAIR), who will be treated with PHAXIAM's anti-S. aureus phages or placebo, in combination with antibiotics.

Prosthetic Joint Infection (PJI) is a severe complication that affects thousands of patients who have received hip or knee replacements, with 50-60,000 new cases per year in Western countries1. The unmet medical need is considerable insofar as current standards of care show a failure rate of 50%, with high risks of reinfection (60%), amputation (11%) and mortality (25% at five years). In addition, treatment costs are high and represent a heavy burden on health systems. In the United States, the incidence of patients is threefold the European patients’ incidence, considering in addition a pricing gap of 25-30% for the treatment. PJI US market for anti-S. aureus phages is estimated at €600-700 million2.

Phage therapy represents a promising solution in this context and PHAXIAM benefits from a leadership position in this indication. This status is supported by robust clinical data from several dozen patients treated in real-life compassionate setting with locally administered anti-S. aureus phages, which confers to the treatment a very good safety profile and already showed clinical benefits.

The IND approval received from the FDA on the GLORIA study protocol is a major step forward in the deployment of PHAXIAM's international clinical strategy. The company has already identified 5 clinical centers and intends to reach 10 participating centers to ensure a territorial network coverage to optimize the recruitment of the study.