Lower Cholesterol Treatment Breakthrough
Lower Cholesterol Treatment Breakthrough
PR74950
GORDON, Sydney, Australia, Aug. 30, 2018 /Medianet-International=KYODO JBN/ --
The American offshoot of Australian biotech Noxopharm, Nyrada, believes it is
within reach of achieving a major advance in the treatment of cardiovascular
disease. It has made important progress with a drug candidate known as NYX-330
that Nyrada believes may be the next breakthrough medication for heart attack
and stroke.
NYX-330 is designed to lower cholesterol levels by inhibiting the action of a
protein known as PCSK9 which has become one of the most highly valued targets
in the pharmaceutical world since its discovery about 13 years ago. A drug that
successfully inhibits this protein has been hailed as potentially rivalling the
US$12 billion annual sales a few years ago of the anti-cholesterol drug,
Lipitor, the biggest selling drug the world has seen.
PCSK9 has become so important because it is now understood to be the reason why
the 'statin drugs', the key cholesterol-fighting drugs, don't work as well as
they should in many people. Having a combined treatment with a statin drug and
another drug to block PCSK9 function is what is driving a major race in the
pharmaceutical industry to find a PCSK9-inhibitor that doctors and patients
will embrace.
Owen Dempsey, US-based executive director of Nyrada and biotech entrepreneur,
explained the size of the opportunity, with about 1 in 4 Americans over the age
of 45 (about 32 million men and women) now taking statin drugs and accounting
for why this is the biggest drug category in the world with combined sales last
year of US$19 billion.
"As good as statins are, they can do with extra help to bring cholesterol
levels down to ground-floor levels in most people," he says. "The opportunity
we are chasing is a drug that could become a standard co-treatment with statins
to deliver those desired levels. A co-treatment to a $19 billion market is a
very substantial market."
Dr Graham Kelly, who is chairman of Nyrada and managing director of Noxopharm,
explained the science behind PCSK9. "PCSK9 works by holding cholesterol in the
bloodstream, slowing down its removal from the blood," he says. "That's a
normal function. The problem comes when our bodies make too much PCSK9. The
result is reduced clearance resulting in higher cholesterol levels in blood."
"We now know that one of the consequences of statin therapy is an increase in
PCSK9 levels, a normal response on the body's part to less cholesterol being
produced in the body."
The discovery of PCSK9 in 2005 triggered a major push by the pharmaceutical
giants to develop a PCSK9 inhibitor that could be given in conjunction with a
statin drug. It was a simple rationale - the statin drug would reduce the
amount of cholesterol being made in the body, and the anti-PCSK9 drug would
mean that what cholesterol was made would be more readily removed from the
blood. A tablet with the same features as the statins - convenient, daily,
affordable, oral - was the goal.
That goal hit early snags, with a general switch to developing alternative
treatments based on large molecule drugs (monoclonal antibodies), two of which
came to market in 2015 - Repatha (Amgen) and Praluent (Regeneron-Sanofi).
"Two very large clinical studies using Repatha or Praluent have now proved that
combining them with statins delivers significant health benefits with blood
cholesterol levels falling about 60% more than statins alone," says Dempsey.
"But despite that proven benefit, use of these 2 drugs tends to be restricted
to very high-risk patients. One reason is practical, with the drugs needing to
be injected every 2 or 4 weeks. The second is cost, with a cost for
unsubsidised patients of about USD14,000 per year on an ongoing basis. These
are not inconsiderable market challenges and we believe that NYX-330 overcomes
these challenges."
Kelly explained the science behind the development of NYX-330. "A private
Australian company headed by Dr Ian Dixon and assisted by 3 Australian chemists
created the breakthrough," he says. "Using proprietary drug design software,
they identified an area on the PCSK9 molecule that provided a suitable landing
site for a small molecule. NYX-330 is the result of that pioneering science."
"NYX-330 blocks the ability of PCSK9 to bind to the cholesterol receptor. That
means more receptors available to remove cholesterol from the blood and that
equals lower blood cholesterol levels.
"We are confident that we have a PCSK9 inhibitor with the potential to meet the
goals of a convenient, oral, once-daily treatment at an affordable cost."
NYX-330 currently is undergoing studies in France and elsewhere designed to
optimise its function, with an anticipated 15-18 months before it will be ready
to bring into the clinic.
Nyrada Inc is a US-based biotechnology company. It was spun out of Noxopharm in
2017 to take advantage of the interest of the US capital market in biotech
investment. Noxopharm currently owns 67% of Nyrada and Dr Dixon, through an
investing entity, currently owns 33% of Nyrada. Senior management, including a
chief executive officer and board, will be based in the US. Nyrada raised A$4
million through Australian 708(8) investors in February 2018.
SOURCE: Nyrada
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