Denali Therapeutics Announces Successful Meeting with the FDA and Plans to File for Accelerated Approval of Tividenofusp Alfa (DNL310) for the Treatment of MPS II (Hunter Syndrome)

Denali Therapeutics Inc.
Denali Therapeutics Inc.

In This Article:

  • Recent successful meeting with the FDA provides path to file for accelerated approval and subsequent conversion to full approval

  • Plan to submit biologics license application (BLA) early in 2025 under the accelerated approval pathway

  • New Phase 1/2 data will be presented this week at SSIEM 2024 demonstrating robust and durable biomarker responses and positive effects on clinical outcomes

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Sept. 03, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Denali Therapeutics Inc. (Nasdaq: DNLI) today announced the outcome of a recent successful meeting with the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) division of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) providing a path to filing a biologics license application (BLA) for accelerated approval and subsequent conversion to full approval for tividenofusp alfa (DNL310) for the treatment of MPS II (Hunter syndrome). Agreement was reached that cerebrospinal fluid heparan sulfate (CSF HS) is reasonably likely to predict clinical benefit and can be used as a surrogate endpoint to support accelerated approval for tividenofusp alfa in MPS II. Based on discussions with CDER, Denali will include preclinical and clinical data on biomarkers (CSF HS and neurofilament light (NfL)) and safety in the BLA for tividenofusp alfa as a treatment of MPS II and intends to submit the BLA under the accelerated approval pathway in early 2025.

“We thank CDER for a positive and collaborative discussion and their guidance on CSF HS as a surrogate biomarker, which we see as a significant step towards accelerating development of medicines for individuals and families living with MPS II,” said Carole Ho, MD, Chief Medical Officer of Denali. “This milestone reflects a collective effort across the patient community, academia and industry to communicate the science and advocate for faster paths to effective treatments addressing these devastating rare diseases. We are excited by the potential to deliver a new MPS treatment sooner using the accelerated approval pathway. We also look forward to plans for conversion to full approval following completion of the global Phase 2/3 COMPASS study, and we are grateful for the continued participation and commitment of patients, clinicians, and study teams involved in the tividenofusp alfa clinical studies.”

“The Phase 1/2 data show that treatment with tividenofusp alfa produces robust and durable effects, with normalization of key disease biomarkers and improvement or stabilization in associated CNS and somatic clinical endpoints,” said Barbara Burton, MD, Professor of Pediatrics, Genetics, Genomics and Metabolism at Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, who will present the Phase 1/2 data at the SSIEM conference. “The totality of data support Denali's plans to file for accelerated approval of tividenofusp alfa with the potential to address a critical unmet need for CNS-penetrant therapies in MPS II.”