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Acceleron Initiates Phase 2 Study of ACE-536 to Treat Patients with Beta-Thalassemia
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. --(Business Wire)--
Acceleron Pharma, Inc., a biopharmaceutical company developing protein
therapeutics for cancer and orphan diseases, today announced the
initiation of a phase 2 study of its novel, investigational protein
therapeutic, ACE-536, to treat patients with beta-thalassemia, a genetic
hematologic disorder causing chronic and life-threatening anemia and
serious complications affecting the spleen, liver and heart. Patients
and healthcare providers currently have limited options for the
treatment of beta-thalassemia. This is the second ongoing Phase 2 trial
for ACE-536, which is being developed by Acceleron as part of a global
collaboration with Celgene Corporation (NASDAQ: CELG).
"The unmet medical need in beta-thalassemia is enormous as treatment
options are limited mainly to blood transfusions and iron chelating
agents," said Professor Antonio Piga, M.D., Ph.D., Director of
Pediatrics at San Luigi Gonzaga University Hospital in Torino, Italy and
coordinating principal investigator of the study. "ACE-536 could address
this important unmet need and I am excited to explore the potential
benefits of this innovative therapeutic in a phase 2 study."
"We are excited to start our second phase 2 trial for ACE-536," said
Matthew Sherman, M.D., Chief Medical Officer of Acceleron. "Both the
preclinical and clinical data assembled to date and our understanding of
the protein's novel mechanism of action suggest that ACE-536 may become
an important new treatment option for those suffering with
beta-thalassemia or other diseases that negatively impact the body's
ability to produce a sufficient number of functional red blood cells."
About the Phase 2 Clinical Trial
The phase 2 clinical trial is designed as an open-label study to
evaluate the safety, tolerability and efficacy of ACE-53 in
non-transfusion dependent patients with beta-thalassemia and is being
conducted in Europe. Efficacy measures include increases in hemoglobin
and red blood cell levels and biomarkers of erythropoiesis, hemolysis,
iron metabolism, and bone metabolism. For additional information on this
clinical trial, please visit clinicaltrials.gov, identifier NCT01749540.
About Beta-Thalassemia
Beta-thalassemia is an inherited disease involving mutations in the beta
globin gene leading to defective hemoglobin production and serious
anemia. In beta-thalassemia patients, there is an over production of red
blood cell (RBC) precursors in the bone marrow, often resulting in bone
deformities, decreased bone mineral density and bone strength, and
pathologic fractures, yet these abundant RBC precursors fail to properly
mature into functional red blood cells. This form of defective red blood
cell formation is known as ineffective erythropoiesis. Beyond the severe
anemia, many patients also suffer from multiple organ dysfunction,
largely due to excess iron deposits, known as "iron overload", resulting
from the ineffective erythropoiesis and the repeated RBC transfusions to
address the anemia. Iron overload can lead to heart failure, liver
fibrosis, and diabetes, among other consequences. Current treatment for
beta-thalassemia includes regular RBC transfusions and daily iron
chelation therapy, which is associated with toxicities.
About ACE-536
ACE-536 is a modified type II activin receptor fusion protein that acts
as a ligand trap for members in the TGF-ß superfamily involved in
erythropoiesis. ACE-536 regulates late-stage erythrocyte (red blood
cell) precursor cell differentiation and maturation, distinct from
erythropoietin (EPO) which stimulates the proliferation of early-stage
erythrocyte precursor cells. In diseases of ineffective erythropoiesis,
such as myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and thalassemia, in which there
is an over-production of early-stage erythrocyte precursors in the bone
marrow, administration of erythropoietin does not correct the underlying
cause of the anemia. By promoting the differentiation of the precursor
cells into mature RBCs, ACE-536 has the potential to treat the anemia in
MDS and beta-thalassemia patients. In a phase 1 clinical study in
healthy volunteers, ACE-536 produced a dose-dependent increase in red
blood cell counts and hemoglobin levels. Acceleron and Celgene are
jointly developing ACE-536.
About Acceleron
Acceleron is a privately-held biopharmaceutical company committed to
discover, develop, manufacture and commercialize novel protein
therapeutics for orphan diseases and cancer. Acceleron's scientific
approach takes advantage of its unique insight to discover
first-in-class therapies based on the TGF-ß protein superfamily.
Acceleron utilizes proven biotherapeutic technologies and capitalizes on
the company's internal GMP manufacturing capability to advance its
therapeutic programs rapidly and efficiently. The investors in Acceleron
include Advanced Technology Ventures, Alkermes, Avalon Ventures,
Bessemer Ventures, Celgene, Flagship Ventures, MPM BioEquities, OrbiMed
Advisors, Polaris Ventures, QVT Financial, Sutter Hill Ventures and
Venrock. For further information on Acceleron, please visit www.acceleronpharma.com.

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