Exhibit 99.1
Seres Therapeutics Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2022 Financial Results and Provides Business Updates
– SER-109 Biologics License Application (BLA) under review with U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) with target action date of April 26, 2023 under Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) –
– Anticipate SER-109 commercial launch soon after potential FDA approval decision –
– SER-155 Phase 1b study cohort 2 enrollment ongoing; anticipate reporting initial SER-155 safety and pharmacological data from Cohort 1 in May 2023 –
– Conference call at 8:30 a.m. ET today –
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., March 7, 2023 — Seres Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: MCRB), a leading microbiome therapeutics company, today reported fourth quarter and full year 2022 financial results and provided business updates.
“We are eagerly looking forward to the upcoming potential FDA approval of SER-109, an investigational first-in-class oral microbiome therapeutic for recurrent C. difficile infection (rCDI). Pending FDA approval, we anticipate a commercial launch in the weeks following a favorable decision. With nearly 156,000 cases in the U.S. this year, rCDI places an extraordinary burden on patients and the healthcare system. If SER-109 is approved, we look forward to offering a novel oral therapeutic with a compelling safety and clinical profile, and capturing what we expect to be a sizable commercial opportunity,” said Eric Shaff, President and Chief Executive Officer at Seres.
“We have also made meaningful progress advancing additional microbiome therapeutic candidates. Enrollment is ongoing in Cohort 2 of our Phase 1b study of SER-155, designed to prevent infections and/or GvHD in medically compromised individuals and we plan to report safety and pharmacological data from study Cohort 1 in May of this year,” added Mr. Shaff.
Fourth Quarter and Recent Program and Corporate Updates
SER-109 Phase 3 program in recurrent C. difficile infection: SER-109, an investigational oral, live microbiome therapeutic, achieved its primary endpoint of superiority to placebo in reducing recurrence in patients with rCDI in the ECOSPOR III study. These results, initially published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), showed that 88% of SER-109 patients were free of recurrence compared to 60% on placebo at eight weeks. SER-109 was observed to be well tolerated with no drug-related serious adverse events in the Phase 3 study.