Sonnet BioTherapeutics Announces Clinical Trial of SON-080 in Patients with Persistent Chemotherapy-Induced Peripheral Neuropathy
ACCESS Newswire · Sonnet BioTherapeutics, Inc.

In This Article:

  • Sonnet's first clinical trial with SON-080 is a Phase 1b/2a double-blind, randomized controlled trial

  • This trial is expected to provide safety data compared to previous IL-6 products, along with preliminary efficacy

  • Recruitment initiated with dosing anticipated to begin imminently

PRINCETON, NJ / ACCESSWIRE / July 22, 2022 / Sonnet BioTherapeutics Holdings, Inc., (NASDAQ:SONN) a clinical-stage company developing targeted immunotherapeutic drugs, announced today that a Phase 1b/2a clinical trial of SON-080 has been authorized to begin. This new study (SB211) will be conducted at multiple sites in Australia in patients with persistent chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN). Many drugs cause peripheral nerve damage and patients with CIPN experience discomfort that can culminate in unbearable pain, which may be a reason to limit chemotherapeutic treatment of the underlying cancer, thereby jeopardizing the chances of the patient's survival. Once established, neuropathy often causes pain, as well as non-pain-related symptoms that can deteriorate the patient's quality of life. This study is a Phase 1b/2a double-blind, randomized controlled trial that is designed to demonstrate safety in patients with CIPN for at least 3 months, compared with prior efforts to develop IL-6 at higher doses for other indications, to give additional pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) data at these doses and to show a preliminary indication of efficacy (NCT05435742).

SON-080 is a proprietary version of recombinant human Interleukin-6 (rhIL-6) that has a sequence identical to the native molecule. As a pleiotropic cytokine, IL-6 participates in several physiological processes including, the innate immune response. The complex biology of IL-6 involves two distinct regulation paths with different consequences. High and prolonged levels of IL-6 potently induce acute-phase proteins, several complement system proteins, and the coagulation cascade and are associated with pathological inflammatory states. In contrast, when native IL-6 is produced at lower levels following moderate exercise or circadian rhythms it can reduce inflammation, improve tissue healing, and help with glucose homeostasis, among other effects. In addition, low dose rhIL-6 has the potential to stop nerve degeneration and is predicted to stimulate nerve regrowth to re-establish normal sensations, thereby reducing pain and normalizing some of the physiological conditions that have deteriorated due to nerve degeneration. The doses proposed for the CIPN indication should result in about the same serum levels of IL-6 that are associated with the physiologic response to moderate exercise.