Skyhawk Therapeutics announces twelve-month results from Phase 1/2 clinical trial of SKY-0515 in Huntington’s disease.


Twelve-month findings showed improvement in Composite Unified Huntington’s Disease Rating Scale (cUHDRS) which is a method of scoring used to evaluate disease progression in early-to-moderate manifest Huntington’s disease. The scores were from baseline of +0.38, compared to an expected decline of -0.92 points over 12 months based on a natural history analysis of symptomatic patients.

SKY-0515 patients achieved reductions of 69% mutant huntingtin protein (mHTT) at the 9 mg dose at twelve months.

What does this mean?

Treatment with SKY-0515 resulted in dose-dependent reductions in mutant huntingtin (mHTT) protein in blood of up to 69% as well as reductions in PMS1 mRNA of up to 26%. Mutant huntingtin is the primary protein responsible for Huntington's pathology, while PMS1 is a key driver of somatic CAG repeat expansion associated with disease progression. SKY-0515 has demonstrated excellent central nervous system exposure and has been generally safe and well-tolerated across dose levels studied.

 

At three, six, nine and twelve months, patients receiving SKY-0515 demonstrated positive mean changes from baseline Composite Unified Huntington's Disease Rating Scale (cUHDRS) scores ranging from +0.31 to +0.38. These findings compared favorably with an expected worsening of -0.92 points over twelve months from propensity score-weighted analyses which use Enroll-HD and TRACK-HD natural history datasets. Favorable trends for patients on SKY-0515 were also observed across all cUHDRS subcomponents, including Total Motor Score (TMS), Total Functional Capacity (TFC), Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), and Stroop Word Reading Test (SWRT).

Download a letter to the community

Phillip Sharp, PhD, Founding Member of Skyhawk’s Scientific Advisory Board and Nobel Prize Laureate for his groundbreaking work on RNA splicing said:

Skyhawk’s results show the extraordinary power of the ability to modulate RNA splicing with a small molecule, offering a therapy to patients worldwide. The RNA revolution continues and I couldn’t be more delighted to see what Skyhawk is doing to advance it.

Bill Haney, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of Skyhawk Therapeutics said:

The increasing separation of the clinical trajectories of treated participants from natural history expectations at the twelve-month timepoint suggests exciting and sustained benefits for Huntington’s patients. The magnitude and durability of lowering of critical biomarkers mHTT and PMS1, as well as encouraging twelve-month clinical findings across all four of the critical cUHDRS subcomponents, reinforce our confidence in SKY-0515’s differentiated mechanism and potential for dramatic therapeutic impact for patients.

Ed Wild, Professor of Neurology at University College London said:

I am very encouraged by these continued safety and efficacy data from SKY-0515’s Phase 1/2 trial in patients, including sustained improvement in patients’ cUHDRS when compared with expected propensity-weighted natural history deterioration at each of three, six, nine and twelve-month prespecified analyses. SKY-0515 continues to reduce mHTT protein to the greatest extent demonstrated in patients, with clinical and biomarker data showing the drug is well tolerated at all doses tested. SKY-0515’s ability to reduce both mHTT and PMS1 appears to be a potent combination for treating Huntington’s disease via two of its core pathogenic mechanisms. These Phase 1/2 trial results, due to be validated in the ongoing Phase 2/3 FALCON-HD pivotal program, give an expectation of meaningful therapeutic impact for people living with Huntington's across the world – for whom an orally administered huntingtin-lowering treatment such as SKY-0515 will be truly transformative.

There are currently no approved therapies shown to slow or halt Huntington's disease progression. The results announced today from the ongoing Phase 1/2 trial of SKY-0515, now including data from patients who were previously on placebo. It highlights the power of Skyhawk’s SKYSTAR® platform to generate potentially transformative medicines which patients can take as a daily pill at home, for people affected by neurological and other disabling diseases. 

FALCON-HD

The Company also announces that the Australia and New Zealand (004-ANZ) portion of its Phase 2/3 FALCON-HD pivotal study completed enrollment six months ahead of schedule with 144 patients enrolled, and that the worldwide (004-WW) Phase 2/3 FALCON-Huntington's pivotal study has expanded to eight countries.

 

More than 175 patients are now enrolled across the SKY-0515 Phase 1/2 and FALCON-HD pivotal studies. Skyhawk expects to advance additional new therapies targeting rare neurological diseases with no approved disease-modifying treatment into clinical development by the end of 2027.

Bill Haney, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of Skyhawk Therapeutics said:

With enrollment in the FALCON-HD ANZ pivotal study completed ahead of schedule, we are rapidly advancing toward the next stage of development for SKY-0515 and remain committed to doing all we can to deliver a potentially transformative oral therapy to the Huntington’s disease community at the earliest possible time.

About Skyhawks Therapeutics

Skyhawk Therapeutics is a clinical-stage biotechnology company developing novel small-molecule therapies designed to modulate RNA targets.

About SKY-0515

SKY-0515 is an orally administered investigational small molecule RNA splicing modifier developed using the company's proprietary SKYSTAR® platform. SKY-0515 is designed to reduce both mHTT and PMS1 proteins.

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