Program and Corporate Updates
SER-109 Phase 3 ECOSPOR III study in recurrent C. difficile infection: SER-109, an investigational oral, live microbiome therapeutic, achieved its primary endpoint of superiority to placebo in reducing CDI recurrence in patients with rCDI.
Seres has achieved target enrollment in an open-label study of SER-109 in patients with rCDI (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03183141), which also enrolled over 25% of patients with a single recurrence of rCDI, to expand the SER-109 database in support of the planned BLA filing. Study results are anticipated in Q2 2022. The FDA recently endorsed Seres’ plans regarding a rolling BLA submission for SER-109. Seres intends to begin the BLA rolling submission in the coming weeks, and to complete the BLA submission, including data from the open-label study, in mid-2022.
Seres has an active SER-109 expanded access program at various sites across the U.S. The program is designed to enable eligible adults with rCDI to obtain access to SER-109 prior to a potential FDA product approval.
The Company continues to prepare for a successful product launch with Aimmune Therapeutics, Inc., a Nestlé Health Science company, who will be leading commercialization efforts. The Company believes that a substantial commercial opportunity exists for SER-109. The cost of a patient with recurrence of CDI has been estimated to result in approximately $34,000 in annual direct healthcare expenses; this does not include the substantial indirect costs associated with this disease. There are approximately 170,000 cases of rCDI annually in the U.S. and CDI results in over 20,000 deaths.
Seres continues to execute pre-commercialization activities in collaboration with Aimmune Therapeutics, including market education and data dissemination to the medical community. Medical Affairs led engagement of key opinion leaders has increased following the publication of the SER-109 Phase 3 data in the New England Journal of Medicine. In addition, activities have been initiated to engage payers in accordance with FDA guidance on pre-approval information exchange.
In January 2022, the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) published data from the SER-109 Phase 3 ECOSPOR III study evaluating SER-109 for the treatment of rCDI. The publication highlights key results including that SER-109 was superior to placebo in reducing CDI recurrence, with 88% of SER-109 patients achieving a sustained clinical response compared to 60% on placebo. SER-109 was well tolerated, with a side effect profile comparable to placebo and no serious drug-related adverse events observed.
SER-155 Phase 1b clinical study activities: In December 2021, Seres announced the enrollment of the first patient in the Company’s Phase 1b clinical study of SER-155 designed to evaluate safety, microbiome alterations, and the impact on infections and/or GvHD associated with SER-155 in adult subjects who are undergoing allo-HSCT. In April 2022, the SER-155 Data and Safety Monitoring Committee met as part of a planned data review, and approved a recommendation