SAN
DIEGO, June 3, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Neurocrine
Biosciences, Inc. (Nasdaq: NBIX) and Diurnal Ltd., a Neurocrine
Biosciences company, presented information from its
neuroendocrinology pipeline at the Endocrine Society Annual
Meeting, ENDO 2024, including primary data just published in The
New England Journal of Medicine from its CAHtalyst™ Phase 3
registrational studies of crinecerfont in pediatric and adult
patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) due to
21-hydroxylase deficiency. In addition, Neurocrine Biosciences
presented CAHtalog™ Registry data regarding the negative impact of
high glucocorticoid (GC) doses and natural history in pediatric and
adult CAH patients, as well as disease- and GC-related
comorbidities data in CAH patients.
"We were thrilled to share our just published primary CAHtalyst
Phase 3 data with ENDO 2024 attendees this past weekend," said Eiry
W. Roberts, M.D., Chief Medical Officer at Neurocrine Biosciences.
"Crinecerfont offers the potential of a long-awaited new treatment
paradigm for endocrinologists in managing CAH. Our CAHtalyst Phase
3 data demonstrate the potential of crinecerfont to reduce elevated
androgen levels and lower supraphysiologic glucocorticoid doses
while maintaining androgen control in CAH patients of four years
and older."
CAHtalystTM Phase 3 Pediatric and Adult
Data
In an oral presentation on June
1, Richard Auchus, M.D.,
Principal Investigator, Professor of Pharmacology and Internal
Medicine, Division of Metabolism, Endocrinology, and Diabetes at
the University of Michigan, presented
CAHtalyst Phase 3 Adult data demonstrating that the study met its
primary and important key secondary endpoints, with 63% of
crinecerfont-treated participants achieving reduction in GC dosing
to physiologic range (≤ 11mg/m2/day) while maintaining
androstenedione control at Week 24 as compared with just 18% with
placebo control participants. The data were published in an online
edition of The New England Journal of Medicine and will
appear in a future print issue of the journal.
In a poster presentation on June
2, Kyriakie Sarafoglou, M.D., Professor, Department of
Pediatrics and Department of Experimental and Clinical
Pharmacology, Divisions of Endocrinology and Genetics &
Metabolism, at the University of
Minnesota, presented CAHtalyst Phase 3 Pediatric data
demonstrating that the study met its primary and key secondary
endpoints and was well tolerated, showing 29.9% of crinecerfont
participants achieved a reduction in GC dosing to a physiologic
range (≤11mg/m2/day) at Week 28 while maintaining
androgen control versus 0% of placebo participants (Poster
#SUN-441). The data were published in an online edition of The
New England Journal of Medicine and will appear in a future
print issue of the journal.
CAHtalogTM Registry—Negative Impacts of
Supraphysiologic Dosing in Patients with CAH
A
real-world study explored the effects of high GC doses in pediatric
and adult patients enrolled in the CAHtalog registry, highlighting
the fluctuations in GC dose and androstenedione over time and the
relationship between higher GC dose and negative clinical outcomes
in patients with CAH (Poster #SUN-685). The findings included:
- Among 44 pediatric patients, 12 (27.3%) received a high GC dose
(>15 mg/m2/day), that was associated with:
- Premature adiposity rebound starting at ~2 years of age (usual
age is ~6 years)
- Early growth acceleration attributed to advanced bone age,
followed by blunted pubertal growth
- In 69 patients (45 pediatric, 34 adult and 10 in both groups)
with available comorbidity-related data, hypertensive diseases and
metabolic complications were significantly more prevalent with high
versus low GC doses
- In pediatric patients, short stature was more common with high
versus low GC dose
- In 40 patients (27 pediatric, 14 adult and 1 in both groups)
with ≥ 3 matched GC-androstenedione records, 92% had ≥ 1 transition
in health state over the median 7-year observation period
- Higher GC dose with androstenedione < upper limit of normal
(ULN) was the most common health state observed at the first
recorded datapoint (48%), with only 3% maintaining that health
state throughout the observation period
- Although 22% of patients presented with lower GC and
androstenedione <ULN at the start of the observation period,
none sustained this health state throughout the observation period;
all patients (100%) had a higher GC dose and/or loss of
androstenedione control at some point in their health state patient
journey
- Limitations included absence of temporal context, variation in
observational period and number of records per patient and blood
draw timing
"Higher rates of overweight/obesity, hypertensive and metabolic
comorbidities related to high glucocorticoid dosing and androgen
excess were seen across all age groups in this study," said Oksana
Lekarev, D.O., Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics,
Co-Medical Director of the Weill Cornell Medicine Comprehensive
Care Center for Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia and an Associate
Attending Pediatrician at New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell
Medical Center and member of the CAHtalog Scientific Advisory
Board. "The variability in control of adrenal androgens throughout
the observation period underscores the difficulty in reaching a
steady state in adrenal control and highlights the challenges that
physicians face in managing CAH over a patient's lifetime."
CAHtalogTM Registry—Natural History of
CAH
The results of a longitudinal study were presented using
medical records from the CAHtalog registry and provided insight
into the natural history of classic CAH, including the height and
weight trends that carry across pediatric and adult patient groups
(Poster# SUN-417). Data were analyzed from 42 pediatric patients
(55% female) and 32 adult patients (72% female) enrolled in the
registry. Median duration of observation was 9 years in pediatric
patients and 13 years in adults. The findings included:
- Pediatric patients had early growth acceleration followed by
blunted pubertal growth. This trend was more pronounced in females,
with mean height-for-age generally exceeding the 90th percentile at
ages 4–10 years but dropping below 50th percentile at ages 13–17
years.
- Mean bone age-to-chronological age ratios were highest in
females aged 5 years and males aged 7 years.
- The mean body mass index (BMI)-for-age consistently exceeded
the 85th percentile (i.e., overweight or obese) in males aged ≥ 5
years and females aged ≥ 6 years.
- Across adult age groups in both sexes, median BMI met the
threshold for overweight (≥ 25 kg/m2) or obesity (≥30
kg/m2).
- 83% of female patients (all ages) and 100% of male patients had
a BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2
- 74% of female patients and 33% of males had a BMI ≥ 30
kg/m2
- Obesity, hypertension, fatigue, acne, and hyperlipidemia were
common, particularly among adults. Among adults, the comorbidity of
obesity (68%) was more prevalent than in the general population
(42%).
Analyses of these real-world data highlight the limitations of
current conventional GC therapies, which usually require
supraphysiologic doses to manage adrenal androgen excess. High
rates of comorbidities related to GC treatment and androgen excess
indicate the challenges with current GC treatments in maintaining
androgen control without causing adverse effects.
"CAHtalog Registry data reveals a persistent abnormal growth
pattern in children, characterized by accelerated growth in early
childhood and deceleration in adolescence, along with early obesity
that was sustained into adulthood," said Perrin C. White, M.D., Chief, Division of
Pediatric Endocrinology at the University of
Texas Southwestern Medical Center, and a member of the
CAHtalog Scientific Advisory Board. "These patterns along with high
frequencies of comorbidities, including hypertension, fatigue,
acne, hyperlipidemia, and insomnia and sleep disturbances,
demonstrate the need for optimized disease management in patients
living with CAH."
Claims-Based Cohort Analysis—Disease- and GC-Related
Comorbidities in CAH
A retrospective cohort study was
conducted analyzing insurance claims from 2020-2022 within the
Merative MarketScan commercial and Medicaid databases (Poster
#SUN-437). The frequency of comorbidities related to adrenal
androgen excess and/or supraphysiologic GC dosing was captured
using International Classification of Diseases, 10th
Revision (ICD-10) codes. Matching between the CAH and general
population (GenPop) cohorts was based on age, sex, payer type,
region and enrollment duration with a 1:5 ratio (CAH:GenPop).
Compared with GenPop, CAH patients had significantly greater rates
of multiple chronic conditions related to both excess adrenal
androgens and supraphysiologic GC doses, including short stature,
anxiety disorders, and diabetes.
- Top significant comorbidities in adults with CAH versus GenPop:
- Anxiety disorders—34% versus 26%
- Fatigue—27% versus 18%
- Depression—26% versus 19%
- Obesity—23% versus 13%
- Hirsutism/excess hair (female only)—11% vs 1%
- Top significant comorbidities in pediatric patients with
CAH versus GenPop
- Obesity—14% versus 5%
- Fatigue—13% versus 6%
- Anxiety disorders—12% versus 8%
- Hirsutism/excess hair (female only)—11% versus 1%
- Acne—10% versus 6%
"These data show a statistically higher clinical burden
of CAH compared with a matched control, with patients of all
ages suffering comorbidities that result from high adrenal
androgens, such as short stature and hirsutism, and from
supraphysiologic GC dosing, such as cardiovascular disease,
metabolic disorders, and bone loss," Dr. Roberts said. "The data
show that many of these comorbidities are chronic, with
cardiovascular disease and the associated risk factors such as
obesity and hypertension increasing in prevalence as patients age.
This amplifies the clinical burden and demonstrates the significant
need for a new treatment approach."
Neurocrine Biosciences posters presented at ENDO 2024
included:
- (OR20-05): CAHtalyst: Results from the Randomized,
Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Period of a Phase 3 Trial of
Crinecerfont, a Corticotropin-Releasing Factor Type 1 Receptor
(CRF1) Antagonist, in Adults with Classic Congenital
Adrenal Hyperplasia
- (Poster #SUN-441): CAHtalyst: Results from the
Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Period of a Phase 3
Trial of Crinecerfont, a Corticotropin-Releasing Factor Type 1
Receptor (CRF1) Antagonist, in Children and Adolescents
with Classic Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
- (Poster #SUN-685): Negative Impacts of Supraphysiologic
Glucocorticoid Dosing in Patients with Classic Congenital Adrenal
Hyperplasia: An Analysis of Data from the CAHtalog™ Registry
- (Poster #SAT-437): Disease- and Glucocorticoid-related
Comorbidities in Classic Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia: A
Claims-Based Retrospective Cohort Analysis
- (Poster #SUN-417): Natural History of Classic Congenital
Adrenal Hyperplasia: Results from Pediatric and Adult Patients in
the CAHtalog Registry
- (Poster #MON-676, RF36-01): CHAMPAIN Study: Initial
Results from a Phase II Study of Efficacy, Safety and Tolerability
of Modified-Release Hydrocortisones: Chronocort®
(Efmody®) versus Plenadren, in Primary Adrenal
Insufficiency
- (Poster #SAT-427): Incidence of Adrenal Crisis in
Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia (CAH) Patients During a Prospective
Monitored Long-Term Study of Modified-Release Hydrocortisone (MRHC)
Capsules, (Efmody)
- (Poster #SAT-412): Morning Cortisol Levels in Patients
with Established Primary Adrenal Insufficiency
About Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
Congenital
adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) is a rare genetic condition that results
in an enzyme deficiency that alters the production of adrenal
hormones which are essential for life. Approximately 95% of CAH
cases are caused by a mutation that leads to deficiency of the
enzyme 21-hydroxylase. Severe deficiency of this enzyme leads to an
inability of the adrenal glands to produce cortisol and, in
approximately 75% of cases, aldosterone. If left untreated, CAH can
result in salt wasting, dehydration, and even death.
Glucocorticoids (GCs) are currently used not only to correct the
endogenous cortisol deficiency, but doses used are higher than
cortisol replacement needed (supraphysiologic) to lower the levels
of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and adrenal androgens.
However, glucocorticoid treatment at supraphysiologic doses has
been associated with serious and significant complications of
steroid excess, including metabolic issues such as weight gain and
diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and osteoporosis. Additionally,
long-term treatment with supraphysiologic GC doses may have
psychological and cognitive impact, such as changes in mood and
memory. Adrenal androgen excess has been associated with abnormal
bone growth and development in pediatric patients, female health
problems such as acne, excess hair growth and menstrual
irregularities, testicular rest tumors in males, and fertility
issues in both sexes.
To learn more about CAH, click here.
About Crinecerfont and the CAHtalystTM
Studies
Crinecerfont is an investigational, oral,
selective corticotropin-releasing factor type 1 receptor
(CRF1) antagonist being developed to reduce and control
excess adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and adrenal androgens
through a glucocorticoid-independent mechanism for the treatment of
congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) due to 21-hydroxylase
deficiency. Antagonism of CRF1 receptors in the
pituitary has been shown to decrease ACTH levels, which in
turn decreases the production of adrenal androgens and potentially
the symptoms associated with CAH. Our data demonstrate that
lowering adrenal androgen levels enables lower, more physiologic
dosing of glucocorticoids and thus could potentially reduce the
complications associated with exposure to greater than normal
glucocorticoid doses in patients with CAH.
The CAHtalyst™ Pediatric and Adult Phase 3 global registrational
studies are designed to evaluate the safety, efficacy, and
tolerability of crinecerfont in children and adolescents, and
adults respectively, with congenital adrenal hyperplasia due to
21-hydroxylase deficiency. The primary portions of the CAHtalyst
Phase 3 studies have completed and enrollment is closed, while
the open-label extension treatment portions of both studies
are ongoing. Data from the CAHtalyst Pediatric and CAHtalyst Adult
Phase 3 studies supported two New Drug Application submissions to
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in April 2024.
To learn more about crinecerfont and the CAHtalyst studies,
click here.
About the CAHtalog™
Registry
In 2021, the CARES Foundation, Neurocrine
Biosciences and PicnicHealth partnered to establish the CAHtalog
(Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia:
Patient and Clinical Outcomes in Real-World
Practice Settings) Registry. The CAHtalog Registry is a U.S.
based CAH patient registry, or collection of clinical patient data,
for patients with CAH due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency. The
database was developed to support patient-centered clinical
research to enhance the scientific community's foundational
knowledge about CAH, and ultimately help patients who live with the
condition. For more information about the CAHtalog Registry, please
visit CAHtalog.com.
About Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc.
Neurocrine Biosciences is a leading neuroscience-focused,
biopharmaceutical company with a simple purpose: to relieve
suffering for people with great needs, but few options. We are
dedicated to discovering and developing life-changing treatments
for patients with under-addressed neurological, neuroendocrine and
neuropsychiatric disorders. The company's diverse portfolio
includes FDA-approved treatments for tardive dyskinesia, chorea
associated with Huntington's disease, endometriosis* and uterine
fibroids*, as well as a robust pipeline including multiple
compounds in mid- to late-phase clinical development across our
core therapeutic areas. For three decades, we have applied our
unique insight into neuroscience and the interconnections between
brain and body systems to treat complex conditions. We relentlessly
pursue medicines to ease the burden of debilitating diseases and
disorders, because you deserve brave science. For more information,
visit neurocrine.com, and follow the company on LinkedIn, X
(formerly Twitter), and Facebook.
(*in collaboration with AbbVie)
The NEUROCRINE BIOSCIENCES Logo Lockup and YOU DESERVE BRAVE
SCIENCE are registered trademarks of Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc.
CHRONOCORT and EFMODY are registered trademarks of Diurnal Limited.
CAHtalyst and CAHtalog are trademarks of Neurocrine Biosciences,
Inc.
Forward-Looking Statements
In addition to historical
facts, this press release contains forward-looking statements that
involve a number of risks and uncertainties. These statements
include, but are not limited to, statements regarding the potential
benefits to be derived from crinecerfont. Among the factors that
could cause actual results to differ materially from those
indicated in the forward-looking statements include: the
crinecerfont NDAs may not be accepted for filing by the FDA or may
not obtain regulatory approval or such approval may be delayed;
additional regulatory submissions may not occur or be submitted in
a timely manner; the FDA may make adverse decisions regarding
crinecerfont; crinecerfont may not be found to be safe and/or
effective or may not prove to be beneficial to patients;
development activities for crinecerfont may not be completed on
time or at all; clinical development activities may be delayed for
regulatory or other reasons, may not be successful or replicate
previous and/or interim clinical trial results, or may not be
predictive of real-world results or of results in subsequent
clinical trials; competitive products and technological changes
that may limit demand for our products; uncertainties relating to
patent protection and intellectual property rights of third
parties; our dependence on third parties for development and
manufacturing activities related to crinecerfont, and our ability
to manage these third parties; our future financial and operating
performance; risks and uncertainties associated with the
commercialization of our products; and other risks described in the
Company's periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission, including without limitation the Company's quarterly
report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2024. Neurocrine Biosciences disclaims
any obligation to update the statements contained in this press
release after the date hereof.
View original content to download
multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/neurocrine-biosciences-presented-cahtalyst-phase-3-pediatric-and-adult-studies-cahtalog-registry-and-disease--and-glucocorticoid-related-comorbidities-data-in-cah-at-endo-2024-302161888.html
SOURCE Neurocrine Biosciences, Inc.