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NEWS

Juvabis AG is proud to announce positive Phase 1 results of EBL-1003 in the Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI) ENABLE Consortium.

Single intravenous dose Phase 1 study in healthy volunteers showed that EBL-1003 (apramycin) was safe and well tolerated in all dose groups. The results support further clinical development of EBL-1003 in patients.

ZURICH, Switzerland, Nov. 24, 2020 – Juvabis AG, a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on discovering and developing treatments in areas of high unmet medical need involving multidrug-resistant bacterial infections, today announced the completion and positive results from its first-in-human single-ascending dose Phase 1 study of EBL-1003 in healthy volunteers. EBL-1003 is being developed in partnership with the European Gram-Negative Anti-Bacterial Engine (ENABLE), a project funded by the Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI), as a treatment for infections caused by multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria.

The randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled study was designed to assess the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of single intravenous doses in healthy volunteers. In summary, EBL-1003 was safe and well tolerated with a pharmacokinetic profile similar to that of gentamicin. A Phase I study to determine the pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability of multiple doses of EBL-1003 in patients with complicated urinary tract infections is now being planned.

“The safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetic results in this first-in-human study are very encouraging and clearly support our commitment to progressing the clinical development of EBL-1003,” said Dr. Sven Hobbie, CEO of Juvabis. “Several studies, both our own and those by independent researchers, have demonstrated the superior coverage of drug-resistant pathogens, and in particular Acinetobacter baumannii. This differentiation is afforded by a very distinct and unique chemical scaffold within the aminoglycoside class. EBL-1003 has the potential to replace aminoglycosides currently used in the clinic, but whose utility is seriously threatened by rising pan-aminoglycoside resistance. Thus, EBL-1003 offers the opportunity to provide a safe and clinically-valuable carbapenem-sparing regimen and, in the absence of any powerful antibiotic to reliably treat A. baumannii infections, also offers a safe alternative to colistin in the treatment of life-threatening multidrug-resistant infections,” said Dr. Hobbie.

“Juvabis’ EBL-1003 programme is the most advanced within the ENABLE pipeline. The successful completion of this Phase 1 study is a very important milestone, and the ENABLE Project has now achieved all its initial key objectives,” said Anders Karlén, leader of ENABLE Managing Entity and professor at Uppsala University.

Dr Pierre Meulien, Executive Director, Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI) said: “We urgently need new antibiotics to tackle the ever-growing threat of antimicrobial resistance. ENABLE’s successes demonstrate that with the right support from a team of experts from academia and industry, potential antibiotics can be identified and supported through the highly challenging early stages of antibiotic development. More broadly, this result demonstrates the strength of public-private partnerships in tackling major health challenges.”

Full PR available here.