Biotech firms target weight-loss drugs without Wegovy's side-effects
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[July 07, 2023]
By Maggie Fick
LONDON (Reuters) - Weight-loss drug Wegovy helped Rebecca Vogt achieve a
major goal - shedding the weight she had not managed to drop since
giving birth. But, after a particularly brutal day in the bathroom
suffering from vomiting and diarrhoea, she called it quits.
"The nausea is just so awful with this medication," said Vogt, who had
endured daily sickness for months.
After stopping taking the weekly injection, Vogt, a 48-year-old customer
service representative in Buffalo, New York, said she regained the 27
pounds (12.2 kilograms) she had lost.
Though extreme, Vogt's experience on Novo Nordisk's hugely popular drug
is not unique. Some 44% of patients taking the weekly injection
experienced nausea and 30% experienced vomiting, according to
prescribing information - the guidance for healthcare professionals
approved by the U.S. health regulator, the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA).
"If there was a drug like Wegovy without the nausea side effects, I
would love to take it," Vogt said.
Some U.S. and European biotech companies are hoping to offer an
alternative to Vogt and other people suffering side-effects.
More than a dozen small, privately-owned companies are developing drugs
that hold the promise of Wegovy-like weight loss without the downside of
nausea, according to U.S. investment bank Stifel, which published
reports in March and July on the obesity market.
These experimental drugs function slightly or entirely differently than
the class of drugs like Wegovy, which work by mimicking the GLP-1 gut
hormone that reduces appetite. For this reason, they appear to avoid the
side-effect of nausea, according to interviews with executives from
three of the companies.
Some of these companies have been working on their drugs for years.
Executives from four of them told Reuters the huge amount of attention
the obesity market is receiving due to Wegovy's success could be a
game-changer for their own drug development prospects.
They said the boom in interest is putting them in a more favourable
position to raise funds from potential investors, as they seek a slice
of a market estimated to be worth as much as $100 billion by the end of
the decade.
"The attention is very welcome," said Jayson Dallas, chief executive of
Rivus Pharmaceuticals in the United States. His company, founded in
2019, is developing a drug that disrupts the body's mitochondria,
affecting energy consumption, so that a person taking the drug would
lose weight if they eat the same amount of food.
Investors are taking note of the demand from people like Vogt.
"The next frontier of obesity treatment would be to achieve Wegovy or
Mounjaro-like efficacy with less side effects and less muscle mass
loss," said Noushin Irani, a portfolio manager at Deutsche Bank's asset
management unit DWS, which had 841 billion euros ($914.34 billion) under
management as of end-March.
Mounjaro is Eli Lilly's obesity drug. The company said in April that it
expects the drug to be approved as an obesity treatment by the FDA as
early as late 2023. It leads to 22.5% weight loss, according to a Lilly
trial published last year.
MULTIPLE APPROACHES
Originally developed to treat type 2 diabetes, the glucagon-like
peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist drugs - like Wegovy - mimic a gut
hormone that suppresses appetite, promoting the feeling of fullness. The
effect achieves far more weight loss than predecessors.
First-to-market Wegovy, which launched in the U.S. in June 2021, leads
to an average weight loss of 15% when combined with changes in diet and
exercise.
Novo, Lilly and other big drugmakers including Pfizer have said they are
working on a second generation of weight-loss drugs that improve on
Wegovy and Mounjaro by offering pills instead of injections or by
potentially leading to greater weight loss.
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Rebecca Vogt, a former user of the
weight-loss drug Wegovy, poses for a photo, in Irving, New York,
U.S., June 20, 2023. Rebecca Vogt/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
But these drugs are GLP-1s and still
cause nausea, according to data the companies separately published
in May from mid- and late-stage trials.
Some investors say biotech companies have an opportunity.
"There is room for multiple approaches. Individuals and their
physicians will see what works best for them," said Andrew Levin,
managing director at RA Capital Management, a U.S. investment firm
focused on healthcare with $9.65 billion under management.
The group led a $132 million Series B funding round that closed last
September for Rivus.
Rivus said its main drug in development, HU6, showed in an early,
eight-week "proof of concept" study to cause weight loss comparable
to the GLP-1 drugs while sparing muscle mass and avoiding nausea.
Results of two Phase II trials of HU6 are expected next year.
If that trial data is good enough, Rivus will consider an initial
public offering (IPO) depending on market conditions, Dallas, the
CEO, said.
Another U.S. biotech taking a different approach that has proven in
early trials to achieve weight loss without nausea is Glyscend
Therapeutics, born out of a lab at Johns Hopkins University in
Baltimore, Maryland.
The company in May published preliminary data from a Phase IIa trial
showing the effective weight loss; the data also indicated the drug
was "well-tolerated". Glyscend's chief scientific officer Mark
Fineman said in an interview that the trials showed "only mild
nausea and gastrointestinal side effects that are short-lived" and
disappeared within a day.
"We have a lot of options from a financing and partnering
perspective, which did not exist even a few years back," CEO Ashish
Nimgaonkar said in the same interview.
The company is well capitalised but Nimgaonkar said he was
optimistic the interest in the obesity market would help in future
fundraising as it advances the drug development process.
Glyscend may consider an IPO if the market improves or a partnership
with a big pharma firm for Phase III trials, he said.
An even earlier stage biotech firm, Antag Therapeutics in Denmark,
told Reuters that the ballooning obesity market has improved its
fundraising prospects.
Antag's CEO Alexander Sparre-Ulrich told Reuters that the company
hopes to close a Series A funding round of 30 million euros by the
end of 2023, to begin its Phase I clinical study.
And another European biotech company, Switzerland-based Aphaia
Pharma, in May launched its Phase II clinical trial of its daily
glucose formulation, which is taken mixed with water. It curbs
appetite by restoring the natural release of GLP-1 and other
hormones, without causing nausea, Phase I data showed.
The effect of the drug on weight loss is being tested in the Phase
II study. Results are expected next year.
"It's absolutely possible that in 5 to 10 years we'll see over a
hundred biotechs working in this area," said Tim Opler, a Stifel
investment banker. Opler said Stifel is not currently an investor in
any of the biotech firms cited in their reports.
($1 = 0.9198 euros)
(Reporting by Maggie Fick; Editing by Josephine Mason and Daniel
Flynn)
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