Eledon Pharmaceuticals Announces Positive Initial Data from Subjects with Type 1 Diabetes Treated with Tegoprubart as Part of an Immunosuppression Regimen Following Islet Transplantation in Investigator-Initiated Trial at UChicago Medicine

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Eledon Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Eledon Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

- First two out of three subjects treated with tegoprubart as part of immunosuppression regimen to prevent transplant rejection achieved insulin independence and remain insulin free, with glucose control in the normal range; Third subject was recently transplanted and is on trajectory for insulin independence

- Islet engraftment in the first two subjects with tegoprubart estimated three to five times higher than engraftment in three comparable subjects receiving standard of care tacrolimus-based immunosuppression

- Treatment with tegoprubart was generally well tolerated

- Study data to be presented by UChicago Medicine’s team in oral presentation at the 5th IPITA/HSCI/Breakthrough T1D Stem Cells Summit

IRVINE, Calif., Oct. 29, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Eledon Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (“Eledon”) (NASDAQ: ELDN) today announced positive data for the first three islet transplant recipients treated with an immunosuppression regimen that includes tegoprubart, the Company’s investigational anti-CD40L antibody, for prevention of islet transplant rejection in subjects with type 1 diabetes (T1D). The investigator-initiated trial, conducted by the research team at the University of Chicago Medicine’s Transplantation Institute, demonstrated potentially the first human cases of insulin independence achieved using an anti-CD40L monoclonal antibody therapy without the use of tacrolimus, the current standard of care for prevention of transplant rejection. The first two subjects achieved insulin independence and normal hemoglobin A1C (HbA1c) levels, a measure of average blood glucose, post-transplant. The third subject, who recently received an islet transplant, decreased insulin use by more than 60% three days following the procedure and continues on an insulin independence trajectory.

Subjects on study received islet transplants combined with induction therapy, mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), and tegoprubart, given every third week by intravenous (IV) infusion. The first two subjects achieved insulin independence and presented stable islet graft function at approximately three months and six months post-transplant, respectively. Islet engraftment, measured by graft function standardized to the number of islets infused, was three to five times higher than three comparable subjects outside this study who received tacrolimus-based immunosuppression, suggesting treatment with tegoprubart is less toxic to transplanted islets resulting in improved graft survival and function. Treatment was generally well tolerated in all subjects with no unexpected adverse events or hypoglycemic episodes. After initial islet transplant, the first participant reduced insulin requirements by over 60% and normalized blood glucose control. The first patient then achieved insulin independence approximately two weeks after the second islet transplantation procedure.