Precision BioSciences Announces Initial Safety and Antiviral Activity of PBGENE-HBV in the ELIMINATE-B Clinical Trial

In This Article:

  • ELIMINATE-B Phase 1 dose finding study for chronic Hepatitis B executing on schedule with completion of first dose administration for cohort 1 (n=3 patients)

  • PBGENE-HBV, the first LNP gene editing technology studied for Hepatitis B, was safe and well tolerated

  • PBGENE-HBV demonstrated substantial antiviral activity measured by reduction of Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) after one administration at the lowest dose level

  • First clinical proof-of-concept in chronic Hepatitis B for a unique editing modality designed to directly eliminate and inactivate the root cause of Hepatitis B virus from covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) and integrated DNA

  • These PBGENE-HBV data mark the second clinical validation for ARCUS in vivo gene editing in 2025

DURHAM, N.C., February 19, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Precision BioSciences, Inc. (Nasdaq: DTIL), a clinical stage gene editing company utilizing its novel proprietary ARCUS® platform to develop in vivo gene editing therapies for high unmet need diseases, today announced initial results from the first administration of PBGENE-HBV in cohort 1, the lowest dose level of the ELIMINATE-B trial. The ELIMINATE-B trial is designed to investigate PBGENE-HBV at multiple ascending dose levels with three dose administrations per dose level in patients afflicted with chronic Hepatitis B who are HBeAg-negative.

PBGENE-HBV, which comprises an ARCUS-encoding mRNA encapsulated in a lipid nanoparticle (LNP), was safe and well tolerated in all three participants in cohort 1 after the first administration of a 0.2 mg/kg dose. The planned dosing schedule in ELIMINATE-B allows for two additional administrations at this dose level while in parallel investigating the next higher dose level. The participants treated in cohort 1 possessed different baseline characteristics: age of infection, duration of infection and level of HBsAg. Across the three participants dosed, none experienced a Grade ≥2 treatment-related adverse event or serious adverse event.

"This exciting initial safety data set provides evidence that ARCUS encapsulated in a LNP was well tolerated in chronic Hepatitis B patients upon first dose administration at dose level 1. When studying novel technologies and drug mechanisms it is important to monitor safety closely, and we believe the extensive preclinical safety experiments Precision conducted along with several rounds of mRNA optimization were critical steps to ensure patient safety," said Murray A. Abramson, MD, MPH, Head of Clinical Development. "We are proud to share this first in human proof-of-concept data with the Hepatitis B community as we plan additional administrations at this dose level and escalating dose levels."