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Verseon Presents Oral Drug Candidate for Diabetic Eye Disease

04/30/2019

Verseon presented promising preclinical efficacy data for the first development candidate for clinical trials in their diabetic eye disease program at this week’s ARVO 2019 annual meeting in Vancouver. This new drug candidate for oral dosing could lead to the first real alternative to eye injections, the current standard of care for millions of diabetics at risk of losing their eye sight, according to a company news release.

Diabetic macular edema (DME) is a leading cause of adult blindness, affecting about one in three long-term diabetes patients. With the prevalence of diabetes on the rise around the globe, preventing complications like DME is becoming increasingly urgent.

Verseon’s development candidate, which is aimed for oral administration, has the potential to fill a large unmet need for both treatment and prevention of DME. The candidate is the first of Verseon’s new class of small-molecule plasma kallikrein inhibitors for oral dosing that is going forward clinical trials.

At ARVO 2019, Dr. Melissa Calton, Verseon’s Program Manager of Ophthalmology, presented comprehensive preclinical data for this lead development candidate. In preclinical models, the compound showed good efficacy against two important drivers of the disease—the kallikrein and VEGF pathways—following administration of a single oral dose (read the abstract here: https://eventpilot.us/web/page.php?page=IntHtml&project=ARVO19&id=3154038).

“What’s most exciting about our DME candidates isn’t just that they may replace eye injections, but that they could give doctors an opportunity to prevent diabetes patients from developing DME in the first place,” Dr. Calton said in the news release. “Its excellent pharmacokinetic profile sets our development candidate apart from other candidates, making it suitable for administration as a pill. We are very encouraged by our preclinical results and are working to bring this candidate into clinical trials.”

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