REGENXBIO Announces Positive Data from Pivotal Dose Level of RGX-121 Demonstrating Long-Term Systemic Effect

In This Article:

Data from pivotal dose level demonstrates long-term, sustained reductions in CSF levels of HS D2S6, a key biomarker of brain disease in MPS II
80% of patients who received the pivotal dose discontinued intravenous enzyme replacement therapy or remained treatment-na?ve
Submission of a rolling BLA using the accelerated approval pathway on track for Q3 2024

ROCKVILLE, Md., Sept. 3, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- REGENXBIO Inc. (Nasdaq: RGNX) today announced positive results from the Phase I/II/III CAMPSIITE? trial of RGX-121 for the treatment of patients with Mucopolysaccharidosis Type II (MPS II), also known as Hunter syndrome. The results were presented at the Society for the Study of Inborn Errors of Metabolism (SSIEM) Annual Symposium 2024.

The totality of evidence from the CAMPSIITE trial continues to support RGX-121 as the potential first gene therapy and one-time treatment for MPS II. In the United States, RGX-121 is also on track to be the first treatment that addresses the neurocognitive decline associated with MPS II, with the potential to be the first-line treatment for patients with neuronopathic disease.

"As we quickly approach the BLA filing for RGX-121, we are very pleased with the data presented at SSIEM demonstrating encouraging evidence of systemic activity and long-term reductions of CSF D2S6," said Steve Pakola, M.D., Chief Medical Officer of REGENXBIO. "The data continue to support that by restoring the gene missing in boys with Hunter syndrome, RGX-121 changes the course of disease and has the potential to significantly improve both vital brain function and the systemic manifestations of this devastating disease."

Data Summary
In new, long-term data from the Phase I/II/III CAMPSIITE? trial, patients receiving RGX-121 at the pivotal dose level demonstrated an 85% median reduction of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of heparan sulfate (HS) D2S6, a key biomarker of brain disease activity, approaching normal levels and sustained for up to two years. Topline results presented earlier this year from the CAMPSIITE trial demonstrated that the pivotal phase of the trial met its primary endpoint with statistical significance. Pivotal results were consistent with data from the dose-finding phase of CAMPSIITE, in which the majority of patients were shown to be exceeding expectations in neurodevelopmental function compared to natural history data up to four years.

In the dose-finding part of the trial, investigators chose to discontinue standard-of-care intravenous enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) or to remain ERT-na?ve for a majority of patients. At the pivotal dose level (dose level 3), 80% of patients were ERT-free at last time point, up to more than 18 months post-dosing. At dose level 2, 71% of patients were ERT-free at last time point, up to almost three years.