Cognitive Improvement Demonstrated With Xanamem™: Actinogen Medical
September 30 2019 - 8:46PM
Business Wire
- Statistically significant results demonstrate cognitive
improvement in healthy elderly subjects dosed with 20mg Xanamem
daily in the XanaHES dose escalation study
- Statistically significant reduction in serum cortisol
following treatment with Xanamem 20mg daily
- Xanamem 20mg daily continues to exhibit a good safety
profile with no serious adverse events observed
- Results significantly enhance the Xanamem dataset and help
shape Actinogen’s drug development strategy for the treatment of
Alzheimer’s disease and other neurological and metabolic diseases
associated with cognitive impairment
Actinogen Medical ASX: ACW (‘ACW’ or ‘the Company’) is
delighted to announce results from the XanaHES (Xanamem in Healthy
Elderly Subjects) trial. The results demonstrate a significant
improvement in cognition in trial participants dosed with Xanamem
20mg daily for 12 weeks, compared to placebo. This is the first
time Xanamem has shown such a clear, statistically significant
cognitive improvement in humans.
These breakthrough results reinforce the hypothesis and science
underpinning the discovery and development of Xanamem - that
lowering persistently raised cortisol levels in the brain is
expected to positively enhance cognition.
Results from the study also showed that Xanamem, at a dose of
20mg daily, significantly (p<0.001) reduced serum cortisol
levels in the trial participants over the study period.
Furthermore, Xanamem 20mg daily exhibited a good safety profile
over the 12 weeks of treatment, with no reports of serious adverse
events.
Professor Michael Woodward from the Austin Health in Melbourne
and one of the leading investigators in the XanADu trial said: “It
is just so pleasing and encouraging to see this positive efficacy
data for Xanamem, following the disappointment of the XanADu trial.
There have been so many past failures with the development of
Alzheimer’s drugs, so these promising results offer renewed hope
for a treatment breakthrough for this devastating disease”.
As previously announced, the XanADu trial in mild Alzheimer’s
patients showed that Xanamem 10mg daily was safe and altered the
cortisol pathway but did not demonstrate an improvement in
cognition.
The XanaHES trial was primarily designed as a placebo-controlled
study to investigate the safety of 20mg Xanamem in healthy elderly
subjects, but also included an exploratory assessment of cognition
to evaluate the cognitive efficacy of Xanamem, using the industry
standard Cogstate Cognitive Test Battery. The Cogstate Battery
evaluated six domains of cognition, with the goal of broadly
investigating whether 20mg Xanamem daily could positively influence
cognition. Results from this trial show cognitive improvement in
three of the six domains investigated after 12 weeks treatment (see
table 1 below for more detail):
- One Back Test: evaluating working memory - highly statistically
significant (p<0.01 with an effect size of 0.83)
- Identification Test: evaluating visual attention –
statistically significant (p=0.05 with an effect size of 0.67)
- Detection Test: evaluating psychomotor function – trend to
statistical significance (p=0.09 with an effect size of 0.76).
Effect size is a quantitative measure of the magnitude of a
result indicating that treatment with 20mg Xanamem daily has a
potentially important impact on these cognitive domains. See table
1 below for more details.
These results demonstrate an encouraging clinical efficacy
signal in cognitive domains that are core to cognitive evaluation
across many diseases.
Actinogen Medical Clinical Advisory Board member, Professor Jeff
Cummings from the Cleveland Clinic in the USA commented: “These
results from the XanaHES study provide Actinogen with evidence of
Xanamem’s ability to enhance cognition and inhibit cortisol
production. Considering the broad array of medical conditions
presenting with cognitive impairment and an associated raised
cortisol, these promising results provide many opportunities for
the ongoing development of the drug.”
Enhancement of cognition in the XanaHES trial supports Xanamem’s
potential for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease and other
conditions associated with cognitive impairment, including mood
disorders like bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia.
Actinogen CEO Dr Bill Ketelbey said: “These are the results we
have been looking for. They are hugely important for the
development of Xanamem and for the potential for Xanamem to treat
Alzheimer’s disease and other conditions associated with cognitive
impairment”
“As we gather and analyse more data from XanaHES and the other
ongoing studies, we are building a much clearer picture of
Xanamem’s pharmacology, potential efficacy, safety, and mechanism
of action; all of which will aid substantially in planning the
future clinical development and commercialisation strategy for the
drug.”
“We look forward to sharing Actinogen’s future development plans
for Xanamem once they have been reviewed alongside these very
pleasing results.”
Table 1: Results summary
COGNITIVE EVALUATION (Test)
P value
Effect Size: Cohen’s d
Week 2
Week 4
Week 8
Week 12
WORKING MEMORY (One Back Test)
<0.01*
0.64#
0.78#
0.64#
0.83Δ
VISUAL ATTENTION (Identification
Test)
0.05*
0.19
0.67#
0.62#
0.67#
PSYCHOMOTOR FUNCTION (Detection
Test)
0.09
0.47
0.65#
1.12Δ
0.76#
Notes: * statistical significance achieved; # effect size
>0.5 (medium treatment effect); Δ effect size >0.8 (large
treatment effect)
About Actinogen Medical
Actinogen Medical (ASX: ACW) is an ASX-listed biotechnology
company focused on innovative approaches to treating cognitive
decline that occurs in chronic neurological and metabolic diseases.
Actinogen Medical is developing its lead compound Xanamem, as a
promising new therapy for Alzheimer’s disease, a condition with
multibillion-dollar market potential and material human impact. In
the US alone, the cost of managing Alzheimer’s disease is estimated
to be US$250bn and is projected to increase to US$2tn by 2050,
outstripping the treatment costs of all other diseases. Alzheimer’s
disease is now the leading cause of death in the UK and second only
to ischaemic heart disease in Australia. In addition, Actinogen is
currently planning an expanded clinical development program for
Xanamem in cognitive impairment in mood disorders and
schizophrenia. In the US alone, the collective economic costs of
mood disorders and schizophrenia are estimated to exceed $550bn,
with the burden increasing every year. The cognitive dysfunction
associated with these conditions is significantly debilitating for
affected patients, with a substantial unmet medical need for novel,
improved treatments.
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