Tiziana Expects To Start Enrolling Patients In Its Phase 2 Clinical Trial To Treat Secondary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis (SPMS) Using Its Novel Intranasal Monoclonal Antibody Foralumab

This month, Tiziana Life Sciences (NASDAQ:TLSA) expects to start enrolling patients for a phase 2a trial of Foralumab, an immunomodulation therapy for Secondary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis (SPMS) that’s administered through the nose. The news marks a major milestone on the path to bring the clinical-stage company’s lead drug candidate to market. 

MS Patients Have Few Effective Treatment Options, And SPMS Patients Have Even Fewer 

The incurable disease involves recurring painful flare-ups that can be so severe people lose the ability to walk or move. This happens when the immune system attacks parts of the body’s own central nervous system, damaging nerve fibers and interrupting communication between the brain and the rest of the body. 

When a flare-up strikes, the current standard of care for MS generally involves either intravenous corticosteroids for reducing inflammation or blood plasma exchange – both of which need to be done in a hospital. 

Positive 6-Month Clinical Results Give Hope That Foralumab Could Make A Difference In Patients’ Lives

This has made it a promising candidate for fighting autoimmune diseases like MS as it has the potential to prevent painful autoimmune attacks without the severe side effects and risks that come with other immune-suppressing drugs.

Tiziana reports that Foralumab is the only anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody therapy currently in development that is fully human, meaning it's even less likely to trigger adverse reactions than the genetically engineered versions being developed by other pharmaceutical companies. 

Positron Emission Tomography (PET) scans of the patients at three months and six months both found decreased microglia activity in the brain. That six-month clinical data also showed improvement across a number of other measures of the disease. 

“We have also seen various degrees of improvement in the Expanded Disability Status Scale, Timed 25-Foot Walk Test, pyramidal function scores and NeuroQoL Fatigue scores in a disease state that typically shows a decline in function over time.“

Building on that positive data, Tiziana is getting ready for a new phase 2a study of the intranasal treatment. 

Patient enrollment for the new trial is expected to begin in December 2023.

Featured photo by CDC on Unsplash.

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