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Study Result

Sep 1, 2022

Operator

Greetings, and welcome to the Vaxart COVID-19 Phase II Top Line Results conference call. A question and answer session will follow management's opening remarks. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the webcast over to your host, Edward Berg, Senior Vice President and General Counsel. Please go ahead, sir.

Edward Berg
SVP and General Counsel, Vaxart

Good morning and welcome to today's call. Joining us from Vaxart are Andrei Floroiu, Chief Executive Officer, Dr. Sean Tucker, Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, and Dr. James Cummings, Chief Medical Officer. Before we get started, I would like to remind everyone that during the conference call, Vaxart may make forward-looking statements, including statements about the company's financial results, financial guidance, its future business strategies and operations, and its product development and regulatory process, including statements about its ongoing or planned clinical trials.

Actual results could differ materially from those discussed in these forward-looking statements due to a number of important factors, including uncertainty inherent in the clinical development and regulatory process, the extent and duration of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, and other risks described in the Risk Factors section of Vaxart's most recently filed annual report on Form 10-K and other periodic reports filed with the SEC. Vaxart undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements after the date of this call. I'll now turn the call over to Andrei Floroiu. Andrei?

Andrei Floroiu
CEO, Vaxart

Thank you, Ed, and thank you all for joining us today. We're very excited to talk to you about our phase II COVID-19 data because we believe that what the world needs, what the world really needs today is breakthrough innovation in vaccines. The world needs next generation vaccines. Incremental improvements to what we already have are not enough to significantly move the needle. What we really need are novel vaccines that have transformational potential. We need vaccines that are easier to administer, that can enable more people to be vaccinated faster. We need vaccines that employ novel mechanisms of action to better harness the power of our immune systems. We need vaccines that have more benign tolerability profile.

In this context, we are very proud that Vaxart is the first company to report data from the first part of our phase II study for an oral pill COVID-19 vaccine that activates not only systemic immunity, but mucosal immunity also. We believe that this positive data adds significantly to the evidence supporting the potential that Vaxart's oral pill vaccine platform has in transforming how we fight infections, infectious diseases globally. My colleagues Dr. James Cummings and Dr. Sean Tucker will go over the study and our data in more detail. Without further ado, I would like to hand this over to Dr. Cummings. James?

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

Thanks, Andrei. As discussed in the press release we issued a little earlier this morning, we're reporting top-line data from our part one of our phase II clinical study evaluating our S-only COVID-19 vaccine candidate. I'll refer to this as the 201 study. The vaccine candidate evaluated in 201 study was developed based on the viral spike protein from the original Wuhan strain of SARS-CoV-2 that was prevalent really at the start of the pandemic about two and a half years ago. Not received prior mRNA COVID-19 vaccination, ages 18-55 years and 56-75 years. Subjects were randomized into six cohorts, stratified by age, vaccination history, and dose.

These subjects received either a high or a low dose of the S-only vaccine on day one and again on day 29, and the immune responses were assessed prior to vaccine administration on days one and 29 and on day 57. The primary endpoint of this study was safety of the S-only vaccine construct, and the data clearly shows that this candidate was safe and well tolerated. There were no vaccine-related solicited grade three adverse events, which are events that subjects were specifically asked to report and include symptoms such as fever and fatigue and vomiting. There were no vaccine-related serious adverse events. These safety findings are consistent with the results from over 650 subjects who've participated in clinical studies of our tablet vaccine platform.

Importantly, few or no subjects in this 201 study reported any symptoms to the severity that were commonly reported in clinical studies of the mRNA vaccines. We believe that this differentiated safety profile, if we continue to see it in larger studies, could help many people who are reluctant to take an injected vaccine due to concerns over feeling ill or really needing to take time off from work or activities of daily living if they experience post-vaccine symptoms. This will help them overcome their vaccine hesitancy. Increasing the number of the total of vaccinated individuals is critical for controlling the spread of COVID-19 and getting the pandemic well in hand.

The secondary endpoint of the 201 study was the immunogenicity of the S-only vaccine construct. We're pleased that multiple assessments clearly demonstrate this candidate induces potent antibody and T-cell responses and stimulates both serum and mucosal immunity. Many of you may know, we previously conducted a phase I clinical study of our vaccine candidate that was based on both the S and the N protein of SARS-CoV-2, which I'll refer to as the 101 study. Based on the results of the phase I study, as well as our ongoing preclinical research, we modified the vaccine construct used in the 201 study to be S-only, with the specific goal of increasing serum antibody responses. We believe that the data reported today demonstrates this modification really had the desired effect.

We observed increases in serum antibody responses in the 201 study and generated a neutralizing antibody response profile that's similar to those reported when boosting mRNA vaccines. Although the comparison is not from a head-to-head trial, so we interpret it with that limitation in mind. The geometric mean titer, or GMT, of our SARS-CoV-2 specific serum neutralizing antibodies increased from day one to day 57 and ranged by cohort between 1.2 and two-fold, with higher increases seen for higher doses. Although we've not done head-to-head studies comparing our vaccine candidate with approved mRNA vaccines, our review of the published data for an approved mRNA booster indicates that the GMT rise was between 1.5 and 1.9-fold.

For our study, the 201 study, among 18 to 25-year-old subjects previously vaccinated with mRNA vaccines, the GMT of SARS-CoV-2 specific serum neutralizing antibodies increased 1.6-fold from 41 AU/ml at day one to 778 AU/ml at day 57. Notably, subjects who started with a lower titer were likely to have a higher increase. Our S-only vaccine candidate achieved this neutralizing antibody profile while also inducing mucosal immune responses, which have not been reported for injectable vaccines. We believe this is a key differentiating factor between our oral tablet vaccines and injected vaccines. The 201 data demonstrate that approximately 50% of subjects who previously received an mRNA vaccine had at least a 1.5-fold increase in mucosal IgA antibodies after receiving the S-only candidate.

Additionally, all subjects who had a mucosal response to the S-only vaccine, and, again, I want to remind everyone out there, it's based on the Wuhan strain. We showed that this mucosal immune response also had cross-reactivity with the Omicron variants, including BA.4 and BA.5, as well as other coronaviruses. Again, these cross-reactive responses were observed in subjects who had previously received an mRNA vaccine, as well as in naive subjects, that is, those who really had not previously been vaccinated against COVID-19.

We believe a key benefit of our mucosal immunity platform is the ability to generate robust, diverse immune responses that may be able to address these emerging viral variants. May help the global community to get out from behind the immunologic curve of protection, where, unfortunately, we've been for the past two years, as the emergence of new viral variants outpaces the ability to update the currently approved injectable vaccines.

Another finding of the 201 study is that the S-only candidate boosted the immune response in subjects who had previously received an mRNA vaccine series. We believe these data demonstrate that our oral tablet vaccine candidate may be able to provide an additional benefit to the millions of people worldwide who've already received an mRNA vaccine. You know, it's clear that additional vaccinations will be required to provide protection from emerging variants, as shown by the U.S. government's announcement recently that updated mRNA vaccines designed to protect against Omicron subvariants will be available in the coming days.

We now have data to show that our oral tablet vaccine can increase immune responses in those who've received mRNA vaccines, as well as those who have never been vaccinated against COVID-19. The data reported today also demonstrate that our oral candidate stimulated T-cell responses. Again, not head-to-head, but we see levels similar to those reported from clinical studies of the mRNA vaccines. SARS-CoV-2 specific T-cell responses were observed in a majority of subjects after the second dose of the S-only candidate. The T-cell responses observed in the 201 study were lower than those reported in the 101 study, confirming the effect of the N protein on T-cell responses. Taken together, the data reported today, at least at this stage of development, differentiate our oral tablet COVID-19 vaccine candidate from injectable vaccines with respect to safety and immune stimulation profiles.

We believe the ability to stimulate broadly cross-reactive mucosal and serum antibody responses and to activate the antibody and T-cell components of the immune system. May well have the potential to provide protection against COVID-19 that has not yet been achieved with the approved injected vaccines. If these findings are confirmed in later stage studies, we believe that our oral tableted COVID-19 vaccine would provide important health and economic benefits to individuals, national health systems, and the global public health community. Now, let me turn for a minute to our strategy for continuing to advance our COVID-19 vaccine clinical program. Recent guidance from the US Food and Drug Administration and other regulatory and global health organizations suggest that future COVID-19 vaccines may be bivalent and inclusive of an Omicron BA.4/5 construct.

As previously announced, we're evaluating new Omicron-based constructs, both as Omicron-only monovalent vaccine candidates and as bivalent candidates in combination with our Wuhan constructs. These constructs will be evaluated in preclinical models this year and will advance to clinical trials in the first half of 2023. We believe this will allow us to move forward with the best possible vaccine constructs for our planned COVID-19 Omicron challenge study in the second half of 2023 with hVIVO, as well as larger trials in the United States and internationally. I'll now turn this call over to Dr. Sean Tucker, my friend, our Chief Scientific Officer, and our Founder, who'll provide some additional context for how the data reported today support our COVID-19 program and our broader vaccine development efforts. Sean?

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

Thanks, James. As we indicated, we initiated the 201 study last October. We wanted to answer two important questions about the immune-stimulating profile of the S-only vaccine. The first question was whether the S-only construct could improve the serum antibody response observed from the 101 study, which was our S and N construct. The second question was whether the S construct could boost responses in subjects who previously received an mRNA vaccine. As James clearly showed in the data we've reported today, the answer to both those questions is a resounding yes, and that is fantastic. As James noted, the observed increase in mucosal IgA is very encouraging, and we believe the positive findings for multiple immunogenicity measurements may ultimately translate to enhanced protection against infection with SARS-CoV-2.

In particular, several leading academic researchers as well as members of the White House Summit on the Future of COVID-19 Vaccines have talked about the potential of mucosal immune responses to block viral variants better than a serum-based response. Further, we and Duke University published a preclinical study in Science Translational Medicine showing that mucosal immune responses do a better job in blocking transmission even to those that are unvaccinated. While we are still in early development, these results give us hope that we can improve on the current approach of frequent injections with limited effect on global COVID-19 disease.

Previously reported data from the 101 study showed long-lasting cross-reactive IgA responses with that S plus N vaccine candidate. While we haven't done time course studies yet for the S-only candidate, the IgA mucosal responses we observed in this 201 study did cross-react with multiple viral variants, including Omicron subvariants BA.4/5. Based on the 101 results, we would anticipate the IgA responses observed in the 201 study may be similarly long-lasting. If we are right, this is important in the durability of the protection that the vaccine may provide.

The 201 data also confirm that the N construct plays an important role in stimulating T-cell responses and suggests that the inclusion of the N may also improve the T-cell responses to S. These data, in summary, suggest that a bivalent vaccine candidate comprising both the S-alone construct and the S plus N construct could provide benefit by improving both the T cells as well as the antibody responses.

We believe the data reported today are clearly an important advance of our COVID-19 vaccine program, but they are equally important for validating our oral tablet vaccine platform. With this data, we have demonstrated a favorable safety and tolerability profile in more than 650 subjects and shown preliminary efficacy in two different viral respiratory indications, flu, and I should say immunogenicity with COVID-19. Collectively, these data advance our understanding of how to optimize development and deployment of our vaccine in our current programs and future product opportunities. We are really excited about the potential for the oral vaccine technology to transform approaches to the critical global health challenges and are confident we have the expertise and resources to realize this potential. I'll now turn this call back over to Andrei for some closing remarks.

Andrei Floroiu
CEO, Vaxart

Thank you, Sean. Early in the pandemic, many of us realized that an oral pill vaccine has the potential to revolutionize how we vaccinate people all around the world easily, quickly, painlessly, with just a glass of water. Later, as coronavirus started to mutate and expose the limitations of the current generation needle vaccines, more and more people became increasingly excited about the prospects of mucosal vaccines. Those vaccines that harness more of our immune system with the potential to offer broader, longer duration protection against current and emerging variants.

The potential of both oral and mucosal vaccines seems so radical compared to today's injectable vaccines that it is natural that many wondered, can these vaccines become a reality? We believe they can, and they will. We have previously shown. Sorry. We have previously shown that our oral pill vaccine can protect as well, if not better, against flu as a leading injectable vaccine in a phase II human challenge study.

We also have generated promising clinical data across multiple studies for our norovirus vaccine. Today, we add evidence for a third program with exciting clinical data supporting the great potential of our platform against COVID-19. As we do so, we feel we are a step closer to realizing the full promise of oral pill vaccine. We therefore look forward to sharing additional updates with you in the months ahead as we progress our program. With that, I'd like to thank everybody for joining our call today. Now we're gonna move to the Q&A portion of the call. Operator?

Operator

Thank you. If you'd like to be placed in the question queue, please press star one at this time. One moment, please, while we poll for questions. Our first question is coming from Charles Duncan from Cantor Fitzgerald. Your line is now live.

Charles Duncan
Managing Director, Cantor Fitzgerald

Yeah. Hi. Good morning, everyone. Thanks, Andrei and team, for taking our questions, and congratulations on the progress and sharing your perspectives on the data to date. I had a couple of questions, but just as a perspective builder, I guess the first question before I get into some of the more details is why present this data now? Also why not include any data slides? Are you soon to request a presentation at an upcoming clinical meeting or can you just help us understand why now?

Andrei Floroiu
CEO, Vaxart

I'll defer to this. This is Andrei. Yeah, we heard you. I think, either Sean or James, you mind taking that?

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

Yeah, this is Sean. I'll take that. I felt like that we had enough data that was material that we needed to get it out there, and that's sort of what our lawyers thought. You know, from the standpoint of actually putting this forward, yeah, I think you're right. It's because there's so much data in here, it's really important to get it out into a conference. I think from our standpoint, we also want to add to it because there's still things we haven't done yet. For example, measure neutralizing antibody responses to Omicron. Those are the kind of things we wanna put into a big package, make sure it's robust, and then present it at a conference. We did feel like that there was enough here that was material that we needed to get it out.

Charles Duncan
Managing Director, Cantor Fitzgerald

Oh, okay. Appreciate that. Can you tell us a little bit about the sample size in terms of the number of subjects? And then do you have data from the other cohorts? It would seem to me that the a little bit older cohort might be of very much of interest and need here.

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

Charles, for the sample size of the cohorts, again, we broke it down into naive subjects and to those who've been prior vaccinated with mRNAs. When we look at those distributions, we look at different ages, 18-55 or 56-75, the more senior component. Looking at the different doses, we looked at a 1 x 10^10 times two doses or a 1 x 10^11 times two doses. Now, you know, initially if you go on clinicaltrials.gov you'll see that the study itself was designed to be a little bit larger, right? One of the issues of performing a clinical trial during a pandemic is that you get the subjects that are available, right?

In moving this forward, we adjusted our size of our study to give what we thought would be timely information on this first portion of our phase II that would inform us on our program moving forward.

Charles Duncan
Managing Director, Cantor Fitzgerald

Okay. The actual sample size, I'm not sure if I missed it. I might have spaced what you said.

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

In terms of, I can go through the different cohorts if you would like. From those who were 18-55 years of age who had the low dose who were naive, there were 12 subjects. Those that were a high dose naive in 18-55, we had 9. Those of the seniors who received the low dose, we had 8. From prior vaccinated and those who were aged 18-55 in a low dose, we had 13. Those who received.

Charles Duncan
Managing Director, Cantor Fitzgerald

Very good.

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

The high dose in the 18-55, we had 12. In the elderly component, in the low dose, we had 12. A total of 66.

Charles Duncan
Managing Director, Cantor Fitzgerald

Got it. Thanks, James. Then with regard to safety, it seems like that is clearly one of the points of differentiation in addition to the efficacy profile being different and perhaps value added. I guess I'm wondering, back to the observations regarding safety, no grade three or greater safety observations for solicited events. Can you describe the gastrointestinal, you know, kind of, symptoms or responses that were reported by patients on the first dosing and the second dosing? Any observations there?

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

I can't break it down by dosing in particular. I can tell you that there was infrequent grade one or other GI symptoms to include some nausea, no vomiting, some mild abdominal discomfort, but again, these are very small numbers. They were short-lived, well-tolerated. I think the important thing from my standpoint when I look at our safety profile is, one, how this compares to our platform, which is it's in sync with what we've seen with our other vaccinations or vaccine programs, but also how this sort of adds up to what we've seen as a community with the currently approved vaccines.

You know, there are many reports and personal experiences for those on the phone you may have had of being wiped out after the first or second dose of an approved injectable vaccine and really being non-functional in terms of work or activities of daily living standpoint. We didn't see any of that. I hope that helps clarify.

Charles Duncan
Managing Director, Cantor Fitzgerald

It does. That's super. It was definitely a personal experience. Can I ask you one last question, and then I'll hop back in the queue, and I think Andrei or Sean alluded to this. Would you anticipate additional data to be reported later on this fall? Could that be in a peer-reviewed or even a pre-print form of a peer-reviewed journal article so we could see some of the data?

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

I think the plans are to publish this in the peer-reviewed literature. As far as the specific timing, you know, sometimes it depends on which peer-reviewed literature format you wish to push it forward. Our goal is to continue to analyze a little more data, as Sean had mentioned, and then certainly to present this in a format at a meeting, et cetera, but also in the peer-reviewed literature. As far as specific timing, I can't say because that's also dependent on the publication we choose.

Charles Duncan
Managing Director, Cantor Fitzgerald

That makes sense. Congrats on the data and progress thus far. Thanks for taking my questions.

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

Thanks, Charles.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is coming from Mayank Mamtani from B. Riley. Your line is now live.

Mayank Mamtani
Senior Managing Director and Group Head of Healthcare Equity Research, B Riley Securities

Good morning, team. Thanks for taking our questions, and congrats on this encouraging data. First on serum antibody response, could you please also comment on if any comparison you've done with convalescent serum? I know you provided some perspective with the mRNA vaccines. And then, relatedly, if you could also talk a little bit about the dose response? I know that was a question also with the 101 study. Looks like you did get a dose response there. Can you just comment on that? And then I have a couple of follow-ups.

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

This is Sean. I'll take the question about the convalescent. We haven't done a ton of work in convalescent sera, you know, in the past. We did a little bit. We'll definitely try to do some better comparisons. I can tell you that the subjects that did walk through the door that looked like they had signs of being infected, but claimed they didn't have, you know, an infection or an mRNA vaccine, their titers were somewhere in the 100 AU/ml -200 AU/ml range. That's from the standpoint of microneutralization. You did ask a good question about, you know, the IgA and IgG, and I'll go through and look at that much more carefully.

Certainly, from the subject that actually walked through the door that looked like their signatures of convalescence was in the 100 AU/ml -200 AU/ml range with, again, the caveat that that's a small N. You asked a question as well about dose response, you know, Mayank?

Mayank Mamtani
Senior Managing Director and Group Head of Healthcare Equity Research, B Riley Securities

Yes. Thank you.

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

Yeah. Obviously, you know, we're still, this is still small numbers in this study, but it does appear that more higher dose, more, you know, looks like it improved the responses. You know, if you're looking at groups that had, you know, a better increase, it definitely looks like it went up with those doses at the higher levels than, you know, the, than people that took a lower dose. With, again, the caveat, these small N. This, and when I'm talking about it, I'm talking about sera responses. But yeah, it looks like that there was a dose response for serum antibodies.

Mayank Mamtani
Senior Managing Director and Group Head of Healthcare Equity Research, B Riley Securities

Yeah, definitely looking forward to seeing those error bars, you know, when you present the data. My next question is on IgA mucosal immune response. Looks like the threshold for responder rate is different from your study 101. And also commenting on why is that, but also, like, I think you broke that out previously in response specific to RBD and S response, spike responses. Do you have that information with this data set, or is that something you're working on still?

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

Sure. Yeah, we've looked at RBD, we've looked at S, we've looked at, you know, IG responses against SARS-CoV-2, Wuhan, and then, of course, we've broken it down that we've been able to look as well at other coronaviruses such as Omicron. I think that when we look at the response rate for this vaccine versus the 101, they're basically about the same. When you're using the same criteria, it's about 50% given, of course, you know, the biggest issue with, you know, when you're looking at mucosal samples, that you're taking material in that's not exactly pristine like sera. You know, you're talking about taking snot or, you know, or spit, you know, and taking it and figuring out, you know, if there's a response.

We feel comfortable saying that approximately 50% of the subjects respond in sera or in the saliva or the nose. Again, it looks similar in terms of the profile from the 101 in terms of number of responders, their magnitude of responses with one caveat, that you know, when we did the 101 study, Mayank, keep in mind, people were certainly more naïve from the standpoint of infection. We think the baseline has actually gone up in people over time in terms of their IgA response. Now you're talking about having to increase a bigger magnitude to call it a responder. That may be part of the reason why the response rate hasn't changed. It's just because your baseline may actually be higher.

Certainly, this is one of the things we saw in this study too, Mayank, is that people that came in with a high sera response, say like they had a high, you know, an IgA response in the hundreds of thousands upon vaccination, those didn't go up, but didn't really to any extent. I mean, maybe that's the limit to the assay. If you talk about people that came in with low IgA responses in the sera, those are the people that seem to have a higher response rate. Again, we'll break this out in publication, you know, on presentations, you know, in the coming, fall.

Mayank Mamtani
Senior Managing Director and Group Head of Healthcare Equity Research, B Riley Securities

Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Thank you for clarifying that. Then just on final question on next step, specifically as the, you know, the bar you're setting for your Omicron variant-specific vaccine, you know, how would you characterize that, based on, you know, the preclinical models that you're running, but also operationally, how seamlessly can that be integrated into your, you know, phase II protocol like you did with the S-only? 'Cause you do have a protocol, right? Which goes up to 1,000 subjects with part two. Is that Omicron variant-specific vaccine just kind of be involved whenever that's ready, next year? In parallel you can also have the challenge study running, second half of next year.

Can you just clarify, sort of how you're thinking about all this?

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

Sure. This is James. You know that part two of our phase II protocol that you mentioned, that was designed over a year ago, and assuming the construct we wanted to push forward with is the current Wuhan-based S-only construct. You know, the world's changed a lot since then with the waves of Omicron, changing government regulatory guidance and our understanding, our own understanding of how our S and our S and N constructs perform clinically. Taking all that into account, the important next steps clinically are for us to compare the new Omicron-based constructs clinically as monovalent and potentially bivalent constructs, and then doing the Omicron human challenge study in the UK with the best construct moving forward.

Mayank Mamtani
Senior Managing Director and Group Head of Healthcare Equity Research, B Riley Securities

Okay. Thanks for taking the questions. I'll hop back in the queue.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is coming from Roger Song from Jefferies. Your line is now live.

Roger Song
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Jefferies

Great. Thank you for taking the question. A couple from us as well. So the first one is the neutralizing antibody. I think Andrei or James, you provide some perspective for the mRNA 1.5 to 1.9 fold increase for the booster. We know this is probably the benchmark for the homologous booster, but they're also slightly higher for heterologous booster for mRNA. Maybe just the real question is, so what is your goal for the neutralizing antibody here as a booster, given you also have some benefit for the IgA and some other T-cell and the cross reactive reactivities here? Thank you.

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

Yeah. I'll take this question. I think the goal with the neutralizing antibodies was basically to show that we could provide something that was a reasonably equivalent serum response. As you pointed out, you know, the platform itself lends itself better from the standpoint potentially of T-cells and obviously mucosal. We think there would be added benefit. I mean, I think from our standpoint, the fact that we're able to show some boosting is really important for us and it shows that we complement the mRNAs. You know, I think I'm not sure if there's a set benchmark, but at least, you know, people can kind of look at the neutralizing antibodies and get a sense that, you know, based on other work that, you know, a minimum amount of protection is going to be afforded.

I think that's one thing. Then of course you asked the question about, you know, variant specific, you know, looking at that, and that's something we're going to do. Again, you know, looking at more of the whole platform. Obviously we have done the work in terms of looking and showing that we can make an Omicron response in the nose. You know, anybody that had a Wuhan response had an Omicron response in terms of increased IgA, and we're gonna look as well in the sera to see. Because, you know, I don't. This is something that, you know, you pointed out potentially in the past as well, is that, you know, there may not be as much room to increase greatly in terms of Wuhan. You maybe just maxed out.

One of the things that could happen is you drag up the variant specific much to a greater extent, and that's something we'll figure out as we go forward. Hope I answered your question.

Roger Song
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Jefferies

Yeah, that's helpful. Maybe just follow up on the variants. So far, do you have the immunogenicity difference between the ancestral Wuhan strain and the different variants and even other coronavirus on the IgA and the IgG and neutralizing antibody level?

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

Yeah. The short answer is we have done that only for IgA responses in mucosal samples because those assays were well developed. We definitely know certainly from the 101 study that if anybody got a response against Wuhan S or RBD, those people also increased against Omicron and any S and RBD. That's no problem. Same thing we saw in this study that we saw increases in the antibody response, you know, to Wuhan. Those same subjects had an increase against Omicron, SARS-CoV-1 and other things that we've tested. You made a good point. You know, have you looked at neutralizing antibodies? Our plan is to look at the neutralizing antibodies both in the nasal samples and saliva samples as well as in the serum against Omicron.

We hadn't planned on doing that thing very, you know, quickly 'cause we thought we were gonna focus on mucosal response, but now we have such strong data on the news that we're gonna basically look at it very soon. That's coming up and yeah, it's a good question.

Roger Song
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Jefferies

Excellent. Thank you. Maybe just last one from us is the IgA. Understand you this time you showed a 50% for the at least a 1.5-fold increase, slightly lower than last time. I think you made a point, maybe the baseline is higher. But you know, similar question. What, in your current thinking, what will be considered as the good responder response rate for IgA, considering you probably wanna prevent the transmission or infection down the road when you do the challenge study?

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

I'll let James answer the question in terms of, you know, the challenge study. I think from our standpoint, what we want to be able to do is basically see that we got, you know, a significant number of people greater than 50% having a measurable IgA response. Again, because it's so hard to basically see changes, we feel like that would be important. I think again, this is sort of where we're at. James can probably talk, you know. One of the things I should point out is that we believe that, you know, even if we're not measuring an IgA response, there could be still something there. We like to look at the quality of the antibodies that were being made, you know, something like neutralizing antibodies in the nose.

I think you've, you know, we did publish a study that said that one of the things we saw is that when we looked compared our IgA responses in the 101 study with convalescents, that the equivalent amounts were being produced in the nose, but the quality in terms of neutralizing potential was higher in the people that had been vaccinated. Those are another thing that we wanna basically look at is, you know, are we improving the quality of those antibodies as well? I'll let James answer the question about the challenge study.

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

Thanks, Sean. Roger, you know, in the planned challenge study, what we'll be looking at is the mucosal immune responses after immunization and, you know, we'll be looking at the potential impact that we'll have on viral shedding. I think that they're related there. I think one of the pieces to also hallmark, and a question we've been asked and by others, is how long does that immune response last, the durability? Sean, I don't wanna misspeak with so many analysts on the phone, but I think we have data from that 101 study that it goes out, is it a year?

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

Yeah. It's up to a year. We've looked, and it looks like it's still durable.

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

Right. I think that the initial responses and their impact on viral shedding is one of the data points we plan to collect when we move forward with hVIVO on the Omicron challenge. The durability piece, again, we'll continue to look at that. We've gotten, I think, very positive data on our previous study.

Roger Song
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Jefferies

Excellent. Thanks. Congrats on the data.

Andrei Floroiu
CEO, Vaxart

Roger, this is Andrei. I wanted to add to what my colleague said on your first question regarding the neutralizing antibodies. As we said before, I wanna caveat this by saying that we are still analyzing this data and processing it. Rather than give you an answer, I'll turn this around to some interesting questions that we are trying to answer. Does this data suggest that our oral tablet vaccine as a booster gives you a similar serum immune response as the injectable vaccines? And would that a lone means that, you know, you could expect similar efficacy.

Aside from that, what's interesting is that the vaccine seems to activate mucosal immunity and generate T-cell responses. You could look at the serum response as being one, which may or may not be similar to what injectable vaccines do, but then also you have, in addition to that, the mucosal response and the T-cell response. The totality of that, we believe, is what's very differentiating and very exciting here. Now, as far as the strength of the serum response that we've observed, I think my colleagues, James and Sean, provided some data points you can, you know, piece the data together here. As far as fold increases from baseline and also something that can help us triangulate fold increases from convalescent plasma.

Again, we need to do more work there, but internally we are very encouraged by what we think we are seeing here.

Roger Song
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Jefferies

Great. Thank you for the additional color. Thank you, Andrei Floroiu.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is coming from Kumar Raja from Brookline Capital Markets. Your line is now live.

Speaker 9

Hi, I'm Shubhendu for Kumar Raja. Congratulations on the data. There is some evidence that previous infection or vaccination or both, they can offer protection to different extent against the different variants, say Delta and Omicron. With regard to the present phase II data, what are your thoughts on the ability of S-only to protect against the different variants? Is it going to be kind of uniform protection or are we expecting differential protection, you know, depending on the strain that's infected?

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

Um-

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

I'll take that one to start, Sean.

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

Oh, go ahead, James.

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

As you know, this study wasn't built for efficacy, right? It was for safety and with secondary immune readouts. I think what we've shown is, along with being safe and well tolerated, that this vaccine did have immune responses. When we looked at certainly the mucosal immune responses, we saw cross-reactivity across for those who responded, they responded not just to the Wuhan strain, but they responded to the Omicron variants as well, right? What that means in terms of efficacy, that'll be a follow-on study. I don't want to go too far down that path. Sean, did you want to add any specific granularity there?

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

Yeah, I'll just add to it. You know, obviously we've seen some really important and meaningful responses in the mucosal samples. It suggests that we're getting a very cross-reactive response. I think, you know, one of the best things that we can do in terms of testing it is, you know, to do those challenge studies and eventually follow-on studies, you know, for phase III. You know, one of the things about the challenge model is that, you know, it doesn't take very many of, you know, SARS-CoV-2 viruses to sort of get infection, at least from the first time. So we think that a little bit of a mucosal response could go a long way in terms of providing protection. With the caveat, of course, we're going to do the study and show it.

From the mucosal standpoint, cross-reactivity is good. On the other side of the question, you know, I think one of the things that has been noted with the mRNA vaccine, you get a very, very strong sera response that wanes very quickly, and it seems it's much more, you know, strain specific. We don't know what the kinetics of our sera responses are, whether they're gonna be more durable, and we're gonna look to see how well they are in terms of, you know, cross-reactivity as well, going forward.

Speaker 9

All right. Thanks so much.

Operator

Thank you. At this point, I'd like to turn the floor back over to Ed for further questions.

Edward Berg
SVP and General Counsel, Vaxart

Thank you. Many of our questions have been answered that have been asked via our IR portal. I have a few though, the first one is for Sean. How does this strategy and these data compare to other mucosal vaccine strategies? James, please feel free to fill in too.

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

Sure. Obviously there's been a lot of interest in the mucosal approach. There's been announced a couple studies that were oral, but no data in humans. There's been some work that people are working on for intranasal delivery as well. So far, you know, I haven't seen anything, you know, super compelling when it comes to intranasal vaccine approaches showing a mucosal response. There's a couple things. One of the things I should note is that one of our competitors, Altimmune, was one of the best in the world from intranasal recombinant adenovirus. When they did their phase I study, they didn't find that it worked very well.

It's an interesting point, and it may be that putting vaccines in the nose or for something like SARS-CoV-2, where people have been exposed to lots of coronaviruses, may impact the ability for it to work. If James has additional info, that'd be great.

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

No, Sean, I think you sort of hit it on the head, right? When it comes to oral tableted vaccines that are thermostable and against COVID being in clinical trials in phase II, we're the leader here. It's some of this is uncharted territory in terms of where we are, and I think we've laid out a good plan of where we're going. Thanks.

Edward Berg
SVP and General Counsel, Vaxart

Okay, next question. This one is for James. The company has mentioned a follow-on clinical trial in India. Can you give us some information about the status of the study and the plans for the company?

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

Sure. I touched on this a little bit, I think, in the presentation, when we were chatting, but, you know, the study for our S-only COVID-19 vaccine construct in India was initially planned over 10 months ago. That said, you know, a lot has changed since that time. As we've announced, we are now developing new Omicron-based constructs. We've also learned a lot since that time, specifically some of the data we've presented here, about our S construct and our S plus N construct, and how they might fit into our development strategy. We'll be refining our future vaccine studies based on outcomes from our proposed phase I studies involving improved constructs, either alone or as a bivalent approach, potentially, in H1 of next year.

We're committed to developing our COVID-19 vaccine both in the United States and internationally. A key part of our development program now is the UK Omicron challenge study, which we announced should be in second half of 2023.

Edward Berg
SVP and General Counsel, Vaxart

Thanks. A question for Sean. Why aren't the results in this study the same as seen in the non-human primate study that you conducted?

Sean Tucker
Founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Vaxart

Obviously, people or humans are not large monkeys. They certainly are different. One of the things that I'd like to point out is that when we do NHP studies or non-human primate studies, those monkeys have really never seen coronaviruses before, and so there's almost no background. When you give your vaccine, you can see a very strong response. I can tell you that humans, you know, particularly if you have young kids around, they get coronavirus infections every two to four months, you know, several times a year. You know, the background levels of antibodies and things in humans is a lot higher. From that standpoint, you know, it definitely impacts the ability of your vaccine to, you know, to be, you know, add on to that immune response.

Even if SARS-CoV-2 is a little bit specific in some ways, there's definitely more background when it comes to the assays and what you're measuring and looking at the changes. There's definitely differences from the standpoint of, you know, your exposures, and that makes a big difference as you're trying to measure these things.

Edward Berg
SVP and General Counsel, Vaxart

Thanks. The next question is for James. Given the data that we presented today, what is the path to an EUA, and what does it look like?

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

I'll pull out my crystal ball, right? Really it depends on a few different factors, right? We'll certainly leverage how the UK challenge study results look, and that data will be very important in moving this program forward. It will also depend on the state of the pandemic at that time. You know, if we as a society are unlucky and we see a particularly voracious strain or two, highly contagious or high degree of morbidity and mortality, then I think there'll be more of an appetite to move forward with our next generation solutions to this pandemic. If you know, the strains continue to come out, I think that EUA might be and aren't particularly deadly, there may be less emphasis on it. It's very difficult to know.

There are some things we do know, right? We know that there are going to be more variants coming out. The coronavirus has a very sloppy gene editor, so it's not if, it's when. Most experts would say it's three to four variant strains per year is what you should be considering, right? Right now, we're showing a cross-reactivity with our mucosal approach. We're just not seeing that with the standard injectables that really, I think harken an IgG serum response. You don't have that protection of prior to infection getting a handle or a hold on the virus and/or decreasing transmission. I think these are very important things that certainly, if proven out in larger studies, would portend a very viable market for our program moving forward.

Edward Berg
SVP and General Counsel, Vaxart

Okay. I have no more questions, so this concludes the question and answer session at this time.

James Cummings
Chief Medical Officer, Vaxart

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Are there any further closing comments? If not, then that concludes today's teleconference and webcast. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and have a wonderful day. We thank you for your participation today.

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