Lily announces positive gene therapy result for genetic hearing loss
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Lily announces positive gene therapy result for genetic hearing loss

Hearing restoration was observed within 30 days of a single administration of AK-OTOF in the initial AK-OTOF-101 study participant

  • By IPP Bureau | January 25, 2024

Akouos, a wholly owned subsidiary of Eli Lilly and Company, announced positive initial clinical results from the Phase 1/2 AK-OTOF-101 study, which demonstrated pharmacologic hearing restoration within 30 days of AK-OTOF administration in the first participant, an individual with a decade-plus history of profound hearing loss.

The first participant to receive AK-OTOF in the study, an 11-year-old at the time of AK-OTOF administration with profound hearing loss from birth, experienced restored hearing within 30 days of AK-OTOF administration. In this individual, hearing was restored across all tested frequencies, achieving thresholds of 65 to 20 dB HL, and within the normal hearing range at some frequencies at the Day 30 visit. Both the surgical administration procedure and the investigational therapy were well tolerated, and no serious adverse events were reported.

"Gene therapy for hearing loss is something physicians and scientists around the world have been working toward for over 20 years," said Professor John Germiller, M.D., Ph.D., attending surgeon and Director of Clinical Research in the Division of Otolaryngology at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, and a principal investigator of the AK-OTOF-101 Clinical Trial who administered AK-OTOF to this participant. "These initial results show that it may restore hearing better than many thought possible."

In the AK-OTOF-101 trial, eligible participants receive a single, unilateral intracochlear administration of AK-OTOF, with hearing restoration assessed by behavioral audiometry and auditory brainstem response (ABR), a clinically accepted and objective measure of hearing sensitivity. Participants in cohort 1 receive AK-OTOF at a dose of 4.1E11 total vector genomes.

"We are grateful to the participants, their families, the investigators and other collaborators who are working together with us on this pioneering trial," said Emmanuel Simons, Ph.D., M.B.A., CEO of Akouos and SVP, Gene Therapy at Lilly. "These initial results highlight the potential impact genetic medicines could have on individuals with OTOF-mediated hearing loss and reinforce our mission to make healthy hearing available to all."

AK-OTOF has been granted Orphan Drug Designation and Rare Pediatric Disease Designation by the FDA and has received a positive opinion on orphan drug designation by the EMA Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products.

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