The running theory here was that reduced tinnitus was a byproduct of improved hearing. Since the data now suggest no improved hearing then that raises doubts tinnitus can improve. The burden is on Frequency Therapeutics to supply hard data rather than just 2nd hand anecdotes. Remember that even Lenire had video testimonials and we can see how that one turned out.
The interesting thing is that we now have two anecdotal cases from the trial of tinnitus improving after the
interim analysis (i.e. it would not become known to Frequency Therapeutics until the full readout). It's only anecdotal, but assuming the drug does actually restore
some kind of input, this would be consistent with the idea that it can take some time for the brain to adapt (neuroplasticity) to the restored input.
12 days? Where did you see that? I thought it took a couple of months.
It's in Will McLean's original paper. I posted it a few pages ago but here it is again:
Clonal Expansion of Lgr5-Positive Cells from Mammalian Cochlea and High-Purity Generation of Sensory Hair Cells
@Aaron91, you better not be fuc*!%! with us. I can't stand this rollercoaster of emotion.
I have no reason or incentive to do this and those who know my story would know I'd never do this. As I said, I don't have sight of any paperwork to confirm or disconfirm, nor did I witness the patient receive the injections, but the patient does have a documented, public history of saying they applied and got into the trial. For those wondering what I may be implying here, Lucchino left a big clue in the teleconference call.
I would also like to add that both of the positive anecdotes stated they think they may have gotten two FX-322 shots as they noticed the shots give a burning sensation.
@Aaron91, would you be able to ask those positive anecdotes about when they got their 4 doses, and in which order of those 4 shots did they experience the burning sensation. I'm trying to figure out if they got two shots of placebo first and then two shots of FX-322 or if they got FX-322, Placebo, Placebo, FX-322, etc. I am trying to figure out why they may have experienced those improvements where other participants didn't.
As mentioned previously, all injections of FX-322 were front loaded. In other words, if you were in the 1-dose group, your first injection was FX-322 followed by three injections of placebo. If you were in the 2-dose group, you got a dose of FX-322 every week for two weeks, followed by two weeks of placebo.
This is why I said very early on post read-out, given the reseeding the lawn analogy, that it almost wouldn't matter if you got 1 dose of FX-322 or 4 doses of FX-322 because a hair cell colony takes 12 days to form. We can't know for sure, but injecting anything into the cochlea during that period, whether it's an empty polymer gel or FX-322 sounds too high risk of a move, especially given Chris Loose said they had never done it before in animals. Before the readout I maintained that this move must have been informed from somewhere, but I now think they simply got greedy chasing after those lower frequencies.
Given the above,
AND given that Frequency Therapeutics' positive Phase 1/2 data read-out started at
day 15,
AND given that their pre-clinical work showed a hair cell colony takes
12 days to form,
AND assuming Frequency Therapeutics were familiar with the literature that an IHC must form first
BEFORE a progenitor can replicate and divide into a hair cell, their decision to go down the weekly injection route is unforgivable, even if you consider just
ONE of these factors, let alone all of them together. It boggles my mind and I can't imagine it was something Will McLean agreed to. That is why I said it sounded as if this was a decision made by a manager, not a scientist - 7 day was too on the nose. For those who are not familiar with science industries, there are always huge conflicts between management and the people doing the research. NASA is a classic case, most notably in the Challenger and Columbia disasters. It's almost as if Frequency Therapeutics were already thinking in commercial terms (getting ready to market the injections as "weekly" to audiologists/patients) and they took their eye off the ball completely. I think
@Diesel hit the nail on the head when he said that this is a company that got too fast, too loose, too soon and ended up getting a giant kick in the nuts. In all of this, I can't imagine what Will McLean must be thinking, as it was his research that shed light on the 12-day time period. The guy must be livid and I wonder if some heads might roll in the coming months.
Actually, around the 17-minute mark in their call they say the increases they saw was less than what they observed "Changes in the WRS are lower than in the past single studies".
My understanding is they are essentially saying curves don't separate at all and are sloping upwards but the the slope is lower than (the FX-322 arm) in the previous single studies.
Clearly the fact the drug did nothing seems to be the crucial factor here. This suggests either the effect observed earlier was a fluke or the multiple injections killed the effect.
Thank you for articulating this. My understanding is almost the same and I think people still haven't quite realised this although I appreciate not everyone had the benefit to listen in to the webcast. Not only were there no differences between any of the groups and placebo, but the differences between the treatment groups themselves "overlapped" as Carl LeBel put it. If we entertain the idea that FX-322 does work in principle (putting aside the debate as to how much), it's almost as if all three treatment groups got the same dose. Again, if we assume the idea that FX-322 works in principle, the only dose that could be is a single dose in effect (if at all). If you pair this with some people lying/faking or "subconsciously deflating" their WR scores to get into the trial, you are left with an extremely messy readout.
Which brings me to my next point, which I think is perhaps mostly directed to our dedicated quant
@Zugzug.
We know that Frequency Therapeutics have stated that there is a mismatch between the historical records of some patients and their screening tests
AND/OR their original baselines. If I understand correctly, they only have the average of those records at this moment in time. When I first made this point, I said it could be either/or, but it could well be a combination of both - patients lying at screening but then performing normal at baseline
and patients lying at screening and then again at baseline. Either way, Frequency Therapeutics should, once they have the individual data to parse through, be able to identify these patients one by one and pick out the outliers. This has made me wonder whether there still is a path to pivotal without redoing Phase 2.
@FGG mentioned one company who failed Phase 2 only to sift through the data down the line, pull out a rabbit and go to Phase 3. Another case in point is Cassava Sciences, who released an interim Phase 2 data readout for an Alzheimer's drug in May of last year and their stock price tanked by about 80%. When they released the full data readout early this year, they too pulled out a rabbit and the share price shot up from $8 to $88 and eventually settled circa $50. Both drugs were for different things, but given Frequency Therapeutics already have FDA approval they will be in constant contact with them and I'm wondering: if Frequency Therapeutics can prove this has happened, would the FDA allow them do a selective read-out where they cut out the outliers? I think it's possible. My concern is that it may not be enough, because Frequency Therapeutics have already said there is some kind of dampening effect. This is where we need the remaining Phase 1 trials to do something spectacular. I agree with
@FGG in that the severe SNHL trial will prove to be the Litmus test. Again, assuming the drug works, it should confirm or disconfirm the current literature regarding the importance of IHCs. Remember, assuming the super-responder theory is correct, we could see a knock-out readout in this trial unlike any of the other trials. So that is what I'm going to hold out for, along with the 210-day tinnitus read-outs, as I don't think this is an endpoint that would have suffered to the same degree from bias given Frequency Therapeutics didn't communicate any specific criteria for it - unless of course they said all patients must have tinnitus of any kind and patients lied about having tinnitus as well. That would suck.
Finally, I have managed to track down a third patient from the trial and await response. I'll write again if I get a reply.