ZyVersa Therapeutics CEO Issues Shareholder Letter Announcing Transformative R&D Trends for Inflammasome Inhibitors, and Provides Update on Inflammasome ASC Inhibitor IC 100’s Development Status

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ZyVersa Therapeutics
ZyVersa Therapeutics

WESTON, Fla., April 24, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- ZyVersa Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: ZVSA; “ZyVersa”), a clinical stage specialty biopharmaceutical company developing first-in-class drugs for treatment of patients with renal and inflammatory diseases who have unmet medical needs, announces that Stephen C. Glover, Co-Founder, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President, has issued a Shareholder Letter addressing R&D trends for inflammasome inhibitors in development, and provides an update on the development status of Inflammasome ASC Inhibitor IC 100. The full text of the letter follows.

A MESSAGE FROM OUR CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

ZyVersa is developing Inflammasome ASC Inhibitor IC 100 for treatment of chronic inflammatory diseases, with initial focus on Obesity-associated cardiometabolic conditions as the lead. Plans for indication expansion include treatments for Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases, and Multiple Sclerosis. The global drug market for anti-inflammatory biologics was valued at $105 billion in 2024, and it’s projected to reach $186 billion by 2034 (Precedence Research). This growth is driven by the rising incidence of chronic inflammatory diseases associated with population aging, lifestyle changes, and environmental factors.

Because of the large and growing market for drug therapies to treat chronic inflammation, as well as the novel approach of targeting the innate immune system, strategic collaborations and M&A activity tend to occur at early stages of inflammasome inhibitor development. Over the last 5 years, there have been over $7 Billion in deals in this space.

Inflammasome Inhibitor Development Trends

Since discovery of the first inflammasome in 2002, it has become increasingly clear that dysregulated inflammasome activation plays a causative or contributing role in the initiation and progression of various diseases affecting all body systems (cardiovascular, digestive, neurological, respiratory, urogenital, and even blood and lymphatic systems). With such a broad and diverse range of diseases that can be targeted, it is not surprising that the biggest challenge in development of inflammasome inhibitors has been determining which diseases to address first.

Inflammasome inhibitor development is now at an inflection point. Major inflammasome inhibitor developers have completed their preclinical programs and healthy subject phase 1 studies demonstrating product safety and promising signals of efficacy, such as improved biomarkers of inflammation (hsCRP, IL-6, IL-1β, IL-18) and metabolic function (decreased cholesterol, triglycerides, insulin resistance, and HbA1c), leading to identification of initial indications to pursue. Many have initiated phase 1b and phase 2 clinical trials, with some expected to have data read-outs between now and years’ end. Phase 2 data read-outs will provide insights regarding the potential role for inflammasome inhibitors for specific indications and will provide direction for future inflammasome inhibitor development.