CANDLE study expected to begin enrolling patients with recurrent VVC, a condition with no FDA-approved therapies, this quarter
JERSEY CITY, N.J., July 24, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- SCYNEXIS, Inc. (NASDAQ: SCYX), a biotechnology company delivering innovative therapies for difficult-to-treat and often life-threatening infections, today announced that it has reached an agreement with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) under a Special Protocol Assessment (SPA) on the design, trial population, endpoints and statistical analysis of the CANDLE study, its pivotal Phase 3 clinical trial of oral ibrexafungerp for the prevention of recurrent VVC. This SPA provides agreement with the FDA that the Phase 3 protocol design adequately addresses efficacy objectives that, if met, would form the primary basis of a regulatory submission for approval of oral ibrexafungerp for the prevention of recurrent VVC, an indication with no FDA-approved therapies. Additionally, a sub-study assessing the efficacy of ibrexafungerp in treating the ongoing acute VVC infections in recurrent VVC patients who failed to sufficiently respond to multiple doses of fluconazole is embedded in the CANDLE study. Enrollment in the CANDLE study is expected to commence this quarter. Ryan Sobel, M.D., Clinical Assistant Professor at Jefferson Health in Philadelphia, PA, founder of the Center for Vaginal Health and an investigator in SCYNEXIS’s Phase 3 VVC program, commented, “We have been highly encouraged by the early clinical safety and efficacy results observed with oral ibrexafungerp in VVC patients, and we look forward to further elucidating its potential for the prevention of recurrent VVC. Together with the two ongoing Phase 3 clinical trials of oral ibrexafungerp for the treatment of VVC (VANISH studies), the CANDLE study may provide clinicians with additional evidence of the potential of this novel agent to effectively treat VVC and prevent recurrence of the infection, addressing an ongoing unmet need for this patient population.” The CANDLE study is a Phase 3, multi-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of oral Ibrexafungerp compared to placebo in female patients with recurrent VVC (defined as three or more episodes of VVC in the past 12 months). The primary endpoint of the study is efficacy as measured by the percentage of patients with no recurrences of VVC, up through their test-of-cure (TOC) evaluation at week 24. Secondary endpoints of the study include evaluation of VVC recurrences at other time points, time to first recurrence, mycological eradication and quality of life assessments. All patients in the CANDLE study will initially receive three doses of oral fluconazole to treat their acute episode present at screening. Patients who respond to oral fluconazole for their acute episode will be enrolled in the prevention of recurrence phase of the study and randomized to oral ibrexafungerp (300mg BID for one day) or placebo, given once per month for a total of six treatment days. Patients who fail to sufficiently respond to fluconazole treatment for their acute episode will be included in a nested open-label sub-study, in which they will be offered one day of oral ibrexafungerp treatment (300mg BID) for their unresolved acute episode. The CANDLE study, which is being conducted in female patients age 12 years and older living with recurrent VVC, is expected to enroll approximately 320 subjects from approximately 50 global centers, many of them already enrolling patients in the VANISH Phase 3 program. More information on the Phase 3 CANDLE study can be found at clinicaltrials.gov. “VVC is a prevalent and serious condition with significant morbidity, yet there is only one oral option available to treat acute episodes and no product approved for the prevention of recurrent VVC,” said Marco Taglietti, M.D., President and Chief Executive Officer of SCYNEXIS. “This SPA agreement for the Phase 3 CANDLE study design clarifies the regulatory path to approval in recurrent VVC. The results from this study and the two ongoing acute VVC Phase 3 studies, can support the positioning of oral ibrexafungerp as the leading agent for both treatment of VVC and prevention of recurrent VVC. Moreover, a nested sub-study in the CANDLE study will provide valuable data assessing the efficacy of ibrexafungerp in VVC patients where even multiple doses of fluconazole failed to sufficiently resolve the acute infection, further differentiating ibrexafungerp from currently available treatments.” Special Protocol Assessments About Vulvovaginal Candidiasis (VVC) Current treatments for acute VVC include over-the-counter (OTC) topical azole antifungals (clotrimazole, miconazole, and others) and the prescription oral azole antifungal, fluconazole. Fluconazole, the only orally-administered antifungal currently approved for acute VVC in the U.S., reported a 55% therapeutic cure rate in its label, illustrating the need for new oral alternatives. The needs of women with moderate-to-severe VVC, recurrent VVC, VVC caused by fluconazole-resistant Candida spp. or VVC during child-bearing age are not fully addressed by oral fluconazole or topical products. In addition, there are no oral alternatives for VVC patients who do not respond to or tolerate fluconazole, and there are no FDA-approved products for the prevention of recurrent VVC. About Ibrexafungerp About SCYNEXIS Forward Looking Statement CONTACT: Media Relations SOURCE SCYNEXIS, Inc. | ||
Company Codes: NASDAQ-NMS:SCYX |