Nasdaq Grants Vaccinex Extension Until March 4, 2024 to Regain Compliance with Listing Rule

Vaccinex, Inc.
Vaccinex, Inc.

In This Article:

Company Has Reassured Nasdaq of Actions It Plans to Take to Meet Minimum Bid Price Requirement

Randomized Phase 2 Study in Alzheimer’s Disease on Schedule to Complete Treatment in June 2024

ROCHESTER, N.Y., Dec. 04, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Vaccinex, Inc. (Nasdaq: VCNX), a clinical-stage biotechnology company pioneering a differentiated approach to treating Alzheimer’s disease and cancer, previously reported that on October 10, 2023 it was advised by Nasdaq that the Company was no longer in compliance with Nasdaq’s minimum bid price requirement and that Nasdaq could move to suspend trading of the common stock and to delist the Company’s securities unless the company appealed Nasdaq’s determination. The Company appealed that decision and has been granted an exception until March 4, 2024 to address this issue. Subject to fulfilling its commitments to Nasdaq, it is expected that Vaccinex shares will continue to be listed on the Nasdaq Capital Market throughout this time and subsequently if compliance is restored.

Vaccinex continues to advance its key programs with particular focus on a potential near-term catalyst, the randomized phase 2 trial of its pepinemab antibody to counter neuroinflammation in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). The last patient in this trial is expected to complete the planned 12-months of treatment by early June 2024. Key endpoints include brain metabolic activity, a recognized biomarker of clinical progression in AD, as well as treatment effects on cognition employing several validated, clinically meaningful Alzheimer’s cognitive scales.

Investors will recall that Vaccinex has previously completed a randomized phase 2 study in Huntington’s disease (HD) in which it was demonstrated that pepinemab treatment significantly reduced characteristic decline in brain metabolic activity as measured by FDG-PET imaging and also reduced or prevented cognitive decline. There are numerous physiological parallels between neurodegenerative processes in Alzheimer’s and Huntington’s disease. A key common feature is the contribution of reactive astrocytes (astrogliosis) to brain inflammation and damage. Vaccinex scientists have demonstrated that the stress of disease in both AD and HD leads to upregulation of SEMA4D in neurons that can trigger astrogliosis resulting in a loss of normal supportive physiological functions such as brain metabolic activity and a gain of inflammatory activity marked by release of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) into the blood. Importantly, treatment with pepinemab in HD patients was shown to reverse disease associated changes in these two biomarkers, which we believe is evidence that pepinemab prevents astrocyte activation. Elevated plasma GFAP levels have also been reported to correlate with Aβ amyloid deposits in brain of patients with AD and to be associated with higher risk of dementia and faster rates of cognitive decline. We believe that these findings portend a potentially favorable clinical outcome for pepinemab treatment in AD.