It's been over a week since the conference, and I've been super busy with my day job (plus one day of travelling to Washington D.C. to see Dr. Josef Rauschecker, more to follow on that!) So, it has been a struggle getting started on these ARO reports we promised you guys, but I'm happy to present you our first little update. More will certainly follow soon, including videos!
Update on Prof. Thanos Tzounopoulos and Retigabine
I spotted Thanos in ARO's 'poster room' — a cavernous space with hundreds of poster slots — and pretty much accosted him with the request of an update for the Tinnitus Talk community. Luckily, he was happy to oblige, though he prefered not being on video.
Of course, I asked him about
retigabine and how his project was going to reinvigorate this drug — once on the market as an ant-epileptic, with lots of anecdotal evidence that it reduced tinnitus, but pulled from the market due to severe side effects. Thanos
spoke about this on the Tinnitus Talk Podcast almost three years ago, so it's about time for an update.
Unfortunately, his retigabine research has incurred some delays. During animal testing, some toxicity issues were found. In his opinion, these were not necessarily severe enough to halt the research altogether; however, his investors got nervous because of the increased risk of the revamped drug failing at some point along the FDA approval pathway. So it was back to the drawing board for Thanos.
He has recently been focusing his energy on creating a new chemotype — what he calls a "retigabine-like" molecule — which should act on the same mechanism, targeting the same channels. In fact, he has several candidates that could work, and aims to narrow it down to a lead candidate in the next 6 months. Of course, he cannot reveal exactly what the new molecule(s) are, for reasons of intellectual property.
I asked him about
Xenon Pharmaceuticals' drug candidate XEN1101, which is also a Kv7 modulator, being developed for epilepsy. He agreed that the drug has a similar mechanism as his, and could work for people with tinnitus. He seemed unconcerned about who will be first to reach the market, stating that "I just want to see something on the market that could help tinnitus sufferers, something they can try out."
Of course, Xenon's drug, if it is approved, would be for epilepsy, but could still be prescribed by doctors off-label for tinnitus. In fact, Thanos considers this perhaps a more expedient way to get a drug on the market for tinnitus, and suggested that he might consider a similar route for his drug.
It was a pleasure finally meeting Thanos in person, and I can say from my personal impressions that he seems to genuinely care about the tinnitus community and wants to help. His 'radio silence' stemmed from uncertainty about how to communicate on a commercial drug development process — which is new to him — rather than an unwillingness to communicate in general. So we may just need to nudge him again from time to time