XORTX Announces Presentation at the Rare and Genetic Disease Summit

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XORTX Therapeutics Inc.
XORTX Therapeutics Inc.

CALGARY, Alberta, Dec. 12, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- XORTX Therapeutics Inc. ("XORTX" or the “Company”) (NASDAQ: XRTX | TSXV: XRTX | Frankfurt: ANU), a late-stage clinical pharmaceutical company focused on developing innovative therapies to treat progressive kidney disease, is pleased to announce a presentation by Dr. Allen Davidoff at the Rare and Genetic Kidney Disease Summit, in Boston, Massachusetts at 10:30 am ET, Thursday December 12, 2024. The presentation entitled “Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease - Genetic and Environmental Factors → Evidence for Aberrant Purine Metabolism as a Second Hit Determining Disease Progression.

The presentation highlights XORTX recent pioneering discoveries in the field of Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease (“ADPKD”), and recent peer-reviewed, independent, published research reports identifying genetic factors that influence over-expression of xanthine oxidase (“XO”) and play a role in several diseases, including kidney disease. These ground-breaking findings suggest that genetic factors that influence aberrant purine metabolism may influence the rate of progression of ADPKD.

Dr. Allen Davidoff, CEO of XORTX, stated, “The recent identification of genetic factors that increase the expression of XO, and/or contribute to chronic hyperuricemia support the concept of a “second hit” – a factor or factors that accelerate the rate of disease progression when present. These new discoveries are an important first step in our understanding of why ADPKD progression may vary substantially even amongst family members. These discoveries highlight an opportunity to develop a personalized therapeutic approach for individuals whose unique genetic factors predisposed them to ADPKD, and the need for XO inhibition to treat those individuals at risk. We believe that XORTX’s expertise in developing XO inhibitors, protected by a patent portfolio that anticipated this opportunity, combined with our therapeutic platform is ideally positioned to deliver targeted therapeutics to individuals. Our planned clinical trial in patients with ADPKD will provide an opportunity to further understand the role of these newly identified genetic factors in individuals with progressive kidney disease.”

About Xanthine Oxidase

Evidence for over-expression of XO in human PKD has not been reported to date, although work by Wang et al. suggests linkage of genetic factors to PKD1. Recently, new emerging discoveries link genetic factors to specific populations and show that higher XO expression is associated with a variety of conditions including hyperuricemia2, sepsis, organ failure and sepsis associated acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)3,4, kidney dysfunction3,4, diabetes5, polycystic kidney disease1,5 and kidney failure6,7. From a mechanistic standpoint, these studies advocate for a precision-medicine approach in which genetic risk variants would guide treatment decisions1.