Correct me if I'm wrong, but if you refer to the first graph on slide 79 you can see that the animals had a permanent threshold shift of approximately 90 decibels between 5khz - 20khz. This equates to profound hearing loss. Since this was the baseline prior to the drug administration, achieving a 10db increase in an animal model with profound hearing loss is a breakthrough in my opinion, especially since this treatment is predicated on the existence of supporting cells being present in order for the treatment to work. At a 90db threshold shift (profound) the epithelium is pretty much decimated at this point, which based on our current understanding of supporting cells would indicate that there are few to none supporting cells left at this point, so for them to restore 10db at the baseline represented in this graph is a big deal.
If the baseline was approximately 40 decibels between 5khz - 20khz in the animal models illustrated on slide 79, then we would see more substantial results in this experiment due to the fact that there are more supporting cells present at a these thresholds.
Also, based on their drug model here, if they can achieve 10db increase in one administration then applying multiple times should have more of an effect since the supporting cells that gave rise to the 10db increase in the first place are still present and don't disappear.
One last point, Slide 82 lists the sources that the data is pulled from, and the LGR5 paper from last February is the latest cited source in this dataset. Frequency isnt going to report any new information until they're published and protected.
I can't wait for the next paper to come out.
If the baseline was approximately 40 decibels between 5khz - 20khz in the animal models illustrated on slide 79, then we would see more substantial results in this experiment due to the fact that there are more supporting cells present at a these thresholds.
Also, based on their drug model here, if they can achieve 10db increase in one administration then applying multiple times should have more of an effect since the supporting cells that gave rise to the 10db increase in the first place are still present and don't disappear.
One last point, Slide 82 lists the sources that the data is pulled from, and the LGR5 paper from last February is the latest cited source in this dataset. Frequency isnt going to report any new information until they're published and protected.
I can't wait for the next paper to come out.