RedHill Biopharma Terminates License Agreement for Aemcolo®

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TEL-AVIV, Israel and RALEIGH, NC, July 9, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- RedHill Biopharma Ltd. (Nasdaq: RDHL) ("RedHill" or the "Company"), a specialty biopharmaceutical company, today announced the mutual decision with Cosmo Technologies Ltd. ("Cosmo") to voluntary terminate their exclusive U.S. license agreement for Aemcolo, a treatment for traveler's diarrhea (the "License Agreement"). The License Agreement, initially dated October 17, 2019, will be officially terminated on October 8, 2024.

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Per the terms of the License Agreement, RedHill will immediately cease any Aemcolo commercialization of Aemcolo upon termination of the License Agreement, at which point all rights previously ascribed in the License Agreement to RedHill will revert to Cosmo.

Rick Scruggs, RedHill's Chief Commercial Officer, said: "This decision to stop the commercialization of Aemcolo was made following careful mutual consideration and we would like to offer our sincere thanks to the Cosmo team for their partnership over the past years."

About RedHill Biopharma
RedHill Biopharma Ltd. (Nasdaq: RDHL) is a specialty biopharmaceutical company primarily focused on gastrointestinal and infectious diseases. RedHill promotes the gastrointestinal drugs Talicia®, for the treatment of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection in adults[1], and Aemcolo®, for the treatment of travelers' diarrhea in adults[2]. RedHill's key clinical late-stage development programs include: (i) opaganib (ABC294640), a first-in-class oral broad-acting, host-directed SPHK2 selective inhibitor with potential for pandemic preparedness, targeting multiple indications with a U.S. government collaboration for development for Acute Radiation Syndrome (ARS), a Phase 2/3 program for hospitalized COVID-19, and a Phase 2 program in oncology; (ii) RHB-107 (upamostat), an oral broad-acting, host-directed, serine protease inhibitor with potential for pandemic preparedness is in late-stage development as a treatment for non-hospitalized symptomatic COVID-19, with non-dilutive external funding covering the entirety of the RHB-107 arm of the 300-patient Phase 2 adaptive platform trial, and is also targeting multiple other cancer and inflammatory gastrointestinal diseases; (iii) RHB-102, with potential UK submission for chemotherapy and radiotherapy induced nausea and vomiting, positive results from a Phase 3 study for acute gastroenteritis and gastritis and positive results from a Phase 2 study for IBS-D; (iv) RHB-104, with positive results from a first Phase 3 study for Crohn's disease; and (v) RHB-204, a Phase 3-stage program for pulmonary nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) disease.