- Aug 14, 2013
- 2,455
- Tinnitus Since
- Resolved since 2016
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Unknown (medication, head injury)
Today, Otonomy did a live presentation at the JP Morgan Healthcare Conference which served to update the market on what's to come in the year ahead. The presentation deck has received its largest overhaul to date and the slide containing the pipeline now looks like this:
The main points of the presentation were:
The main points of the presentation were:
- A review of the recent AVERTS-1/2 trials for Ménière's disease (treating vertigo, not tinnitus). The AVERTS-1 trial (which was US-based) failed to meet its primary endpoint (vertigo days) while the EU-trial did not. The cause of the failure was explained during the presentation and also took up most of the Q&A-session. Essentially, the US-trial had a bias introduced due to the earlier phase-II trial also having been conducted in the United States. The consensus (among US doctors) when entering the phase-III trial was that the treatment works and it would appear that they – the physicians – may have prepped the patients in a biased way (i.e. "the treatment works!"). This was not the case for the EU-trial which had a neutral way of enrolling patients (as doctors had no prior experience with the intervention). The above led to a higher placebo-based response (in vertigo days) than should have been seen for the US-trial, and consequently, the difference in vertigo days (between placebo and drug) could not lead to a strong enough statistical outcome. A further phase-III trial is now being planned if it should be necessary to enroll additional patients in order to satisfy the FDA requirements needed to bring OTIVIDEX to market. Being a patient-reported trial, the study was especially susceptible to bias.
- OTIPRIO is scheduled to be divested but is still being sold.
- OTO-311 will be renamed OTO-313 as a new formulation has been discovered. Clinical trials (for patients, not healthy volunteers) expected to commence in 2019.
- The hearing loss programme has now been split into three bits: a treatment for hidden hearing loss (i.e. those who have a normal pure-tone audiogram but cannot hear conversations with background noise present) called OTO-413 (targets ribbon synapses), a treatment for oto-protection (this was previously supported by OTIVIDEX which has several uses but a new superior compound has been found) called OTO-5xx, and a treatment for hair cell regeneration called OTO-6xx. OTO-413 will be the first treatment to hit clinical trials in 2019. The hearing loss trials should not risk the same types of bias (as was seen from the AVERTS-trials) as objective measures will be incorporated for testing outcomes.
- Otonomy has sufficient cash to complete a future OTIVIDEX clinical trial and meet the next inflection points for the rest of the pipeline.