single domain antibody

Nanoantibody Development Shows Momentum —Join the Dance Now Or Play Catch-up Forever

Oct 8, 2017, San Diego, CA: Last week, Belgian company Ablynx Inc. announced IPO plans based on robust results from a Phase III study with caplacizumab, the very first nanoantibody drug ready for market.

Caplacizumab targets von Willebrand factor (vWF), will benefit patients afflicted with acquired thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (aTTP), a life-threatening autoimmune blood clotting disorder.

The Phase III study (named as HERCULES) met the primary endpoint, namely a statistically significant reduction in time to platelet count response in patients, besides providing standard-of-care. Patients on caplacizumab were 1.5 times more likely to achieve platelet count response at any given time point, compared to placebo control. In addition, the study also met two key secondary endpoints, namely, a 74% reduction in the percentage of patients with recurrence of aTTP or related death, and absence of any major thromboembolic event during study. In addition, the proportion of patients with a recurrence of aTTP during the study period (including the 28 day follow-up period after discontinuation of the drug) was 67% lower in the caplacizumab arm compared to the placebo arm, demonstrating the sustained benefits from the treatment.

Ablynx immediately sought to capitalize the outstanding clinical benefits provided by caplacizumab. On the same day of publicizing their clinical trial results, Ablynx announced filing of a Registration Statement on Form F-1 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for a proposed stock offering (IPO in the US in the form of American Depositary Shares (“ADSs”) and private placement of ordinary shares in Europe). Ablynx plans to obtain $150 million to finance its commercialization of their new nanoantibody in the U.S. and Europe. With the new developments, the company also expects to accelerate the clinical development of other nanoantibodies, including ALX-0171 which targets respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection.

With these exciting news out on the market, now is a great time for the traditional players in the pharmaceutical industry to take a good look and seriously evaluate the possibility to add nanoantibody to their development portfolio. The time is now because success of the new Ablynx drug has minimized the investment risk by proving the feasibility, potential, and advantages of nanoantibodies. The time is now because the field of therapeutic nanoantibodies is still wide open, unlike other crowded, highly competitive arena of conventional antibodies. The time is now, also because with nanoantibodies just starting to get onto the map, an investment in nanoantibodies has the potential of delivering extraordinary returns.

Allele is actively involved in the preclinical development of therapeutic nanoantibody for the past several years, and has accumulated significant IP and technological know-how in this space, and a dozen or so programs ranging from oncology to inflammation. We have a high-speed new technology by which we can get dozens of new nanoantibodies per year, and a pipeline by which we routinely perform humanization, bi- or multi-valency, and expression optimization. We welcome inquiries into our development program, collaboration or joint development proposals, and in exploring investment opportunities with us.

Contact Alleleblog or the Allele nAb team: Dr. Jenny Higginbotham, jhigginbotham@allelebiotech.com; Dr. Nobuki Nakanishi, nnakanishi@allelebiotech.com

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