RedHill Announces First Patient Enrolled in U.S. Government-Supported COVID-19 Study

In This Article:

First patient enrolled in the global, 300-patient, Phase 2 adaptive platform trial arm of RHB-107 (upamostat)1 for early COVID-19 outpatient treatment, funded through non-dilutive external sources, including the U.S. Department of Defense

The study is expected to be completed by the end of 2024

RHB-107 successfully met the primary endpoint of safety and tolerability and delivered promising efficacy results, including marked reduction in hospitalization due to COVID-19 in a U.S. Phase 2 study2

RHB-107 is a novel, oral, once-daily, host-directed potential broad-acting antiviral expected to act independently of viral spike protein mutations3

RALEIGH, N.C. and TEL-AVIV, Israel, April 24, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- RedHill Biopharma Ltd. (Nasdaq: RDHL) ("RedHill" or the "Company"), a specialty biopharmaceutical company, today announced that the first patient has been enrolled in the Austere environments Consortium for Enhanced Sepsis Outcomes' (ACESO) U.S. government-supported PROTECT multinational platform trial for early COVID-19 outpatient treatment. RHB-107 (upamostat) is the first drug being tested in this platform study. Funded through non-dilutive external sources, including the U.S. Department of Defense, the PROTECT study is expected to be conducted in the U.S., Thailand, Ivory Coast, South Africa and Uganda, and is estimated to be completed by the end of 2024.

RedHill_Biopharma_Logo
RedHill_Biopharma_Logo

"Enrollment of the first patient in the study marks an important milestone for RHB-107 in the 300-patient U.S. government-supported PROTECT platform study, which could add significant validating data to the previous marked reduction in hospitalizations due to COVID-19 seen in the RHB-107 arm of our earlier U.S. Phase 2 study," said Gilead Raday, RedHill's Chief Operating Officer and Head of R&D. "RHB-107 is a novel, potentially broad-acting, host-directed antiviral that is expected to act independently of viral spike protein mutations. If approved, RHB-107 could provide a much-needed additional option for use in the early COVID-19 treatment space, alongside Paxlovid. Additionally, with both RHB-107 and opaganib recently demonstrating distinct synergistic effect when combined individually with remdesivir in an in vitro Ebola study, we are making encouraging progress with our pipeline assets for pandemic preparedness."

Data from RHB-107's previous U.S. Phase 2 study showed a 100% reduction in hospitalization due to COVID-19, with zero patients (0/41) on the RHB-107 arms versus 15% (3/20) hospitalized for COVID-19 on the placebo-controlled arm (nominal p-value=0.0317). The study also showed an approximately 88% reduction in reported new severe COVID-19 symptoms after treatment initiation, with 2.4% of the RHB-107 treated group (1/41) versus 20% (4/20) of patients in the placebo-controlled arm (nominal p-value=0.036) reporting new severe COVID-19 symptoms. Further post-hoc analysis showed faster recovery periods from severe COVID-19 symptoms with a median of 3 days to recovery with upamostat compared to 8 days with the placebo.