Greetings, and welcome to the Eledon Pharmaceuticals Q4 and Full Year 2022 Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the forum presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded today, March 30, 2023. At this time, I would now like to turn the conference call over to Paul Little, Chief Financial Officer of Eledon. Please go ahead, sir.
Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining Eledon's Q4 and Full Year 2022 Operating and Financial Results Conference Call. I'm joined on today's call by David-Alexandre C. Gros, Chief Executive Officer, and Steve Perrin, our President and Chief Scientific Officer. Jeff Bornstein, our Chief Medical Officer, is not present today as he is traveling to the World Congress of Nephrology. Earlier today, Eledon issued a press release announcing financial results for the Q4 and full year ended December 31, 2022. You may access the release under the Investors tab on our company's website at eledon.com. I would like to remind everyone that statements made during this conference call relating to Eledon's expected future performance, future business prospects, or future events or plans may include forward-looking statements as defined under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
All such forward-looking statements are intended to be subject to the safe harbor protection provided by the Reform Act. Actual outcomes and results could differ materially from these forecasts due to the impact of many factors beyond the control of Eledon. Eledon expressly disclaims any duty to provide updates to its forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. Participants are directed to the risk factors set forth in Eledon's reports filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. It is my pleasure to pass the call to Eledon's CEO, Dr. David-Alexandre C. Gros. D.A.
Thank you, Paul, and thank you all for joining the call today. We made the strategic decision as we enter 2023 to primarily focus our financial and organizational resources on our kidney transplantation program, to continue to seek non-dilutive financing for our ALS program, and to deprioritize our IgA nephropathy and islet cell transplant programs. Our rationale was based on the significant existing preclinical data from both tegoprubart, our anti-CD40 Ligand antibody, and historical anti-CD40 Ligand antibodies demonstrating the class's potential in organ transplantation, combined with the large potential size of the transplant market, a clear regulatory path that also provides for potential upside using kidney function or another predictive endpoint, and the concentration of organ transplantation in the United States across a relatively limited number of hospitals, thus making it possible for a smaller-sized biotech to tackle from a sales and marketing perspective.
Tomorrow, at the World Congress of Nephrology, we will release open label data from our phase 1b trial evaluating tegoprubart in kidney transplantation. We will present the kidney function data of three kidney transplant recipients that were treated with tegoprubart, replacing tacrolimus as the cornerstone chronic anti-rejection therapy. Steve will go into further details about this open label data later in the call. I do want to point out one significant data point that at available time points between four and 31 weeks, the average EGFR achieved by this cohort was consistently above 70 mL per minute per 1.73 m². These data demonstrate that tegoprubart is successfully protecting the kidney after transplant, and that there was no rejection, and that the observed mean eGFR is notably higher than the mean eGFR using current standard of care, which is commonly reported in the 50s.
A novel drug that could prevent rejection while also significantly improving short and long-term graft function would benefit transplant patients and fill an unmet need in a market where the standard of care has changed little in decades. When looked at together with the results we reported last year in ALS, these kidney transplant data further demonstrate tegoprubart's activity. In our phase II ALS trial, we demonstrated dose-dependent target engagement and how that target engagement resulted in a broad dose-dependent decrease in pro-inflammatory biomarkers. We are now demonstrating that this broad anti-inflammatory effect results in a clinical benefit in the prevention of rejection and the protection of kidneys after transplantation.
At the World Congress of Nephrology, we will also release safety data from our phase II trial evaluating Tegoprubart in IgA nephropathy, wherein 16 patients going out up to 42 weeks, there were no severe adverse events and only two related drug adverse events. This IgAN data continues to demonstrate that Tegoprubart is safe and well-tolerated and adds to Tegoprubart's robust and growing safety database, which now includes about 100 human subjects across various disease indications. Last year, we made significant progress in the development of tegoprubart for use in kidney transplantation and expect to continue that momentum this year. We received IND clearance from the US FDA for BESTOW, our planned phase II trial evaluating tegoprubart versus the standard of care tacrolimus for the prevention of rejection in persons receiving a de novo kidney transplant.
The trial is planned to enroll 120 subjects and includes a long-term extension allowing for the collection of longer-term efficacy and safety from both this phase II as well as the ongoing phase Ib trial. We remain on track to initiate this trial in the middle of the year. The shortage of transplantable organs and cells for patients who need them is a global issue. Over the past decades, the number of patients that require transplant has continued to grow faster than the number of potential organs available. Xenotransplantation, or the use of animal organs in humans, provides a potential solution to close the organ gap. In January of this year, we announced a collaboration for the use of tegoprubart in preclinical xenotransplantation studies with eGenesis.
Under this agreement, tegoprubart will be administered as a component of eGenesis' immunosuppression regimen for the prevention of xenotransplant rejection in non-human primate studies. We believe this is a key first step that establishes a framework for expanded collaborations, including the potential use of tegoprubart for preclinical xeno studies across eGenesis' kidney, heart, and islet cell programs. With that, I'll hand the call over to Steve Perrin, our President and Chief Scientific Officer, to provide additional details on our development programs. Steve.
Thank you, D.A. Our lead indication for tegoprubart is kidney transplantation, where we are seeking to replace CNIs as the first-line cornerstone immunosuppressive therapy for the prevention of organ transplant rejection. CNIs were a revolutionary treatment when they were first approved about 30 years ago, and over the years, they've shown very good 1-year patient and graft outcomes. Chronic exposure to CNIs, however, is associated with nephrotoxicity, resulting in decreased kidney function, beta cell toxicity resulting in hyperglycemia and post-transplant new onset diabetes, cardiotoxicity, and neurotoxicity, including tremor and brain fog. Ironically, both CNIs' nephrotoxicity and increase in diabetes may shorten the lifespan of the same transplanted kidneys that CNIs are intended to protect. As a result, we believe that tegoprubart, in combination with the elimination of CNIs from renal transplant procedures, can increase long-term graft survival and significantly eliminate the toxicities associated with prolonged exposures to CNIs.
We see the market for a new immunosuppressive regimen for kidney transplant recipients as a significant unmet opportunity. There are approximately 25,000 kidney transplants a year in the United States and approximately 240,000 patients living with a kidney graft. Moreover, every year, about 5,000 Americans die awaiting for a kidney while on the kidney transplant list. Since the mean age of transplantation is about 50 years old and on average, transplanted kidneys from deceased donors function only about 10-12 years, increasing graft durability is a significant unmet need for patients who are living with or waiting for a transplant. Moreover, extending the life of transplanted kidneys would mean fewer patients going back on dialysis or needing a second transplant, thus both relieving pressure on the duration of waiting lists and decreasing medical costs.
A key component in assessing kidney function is the measurement estimated glomerular filtration rate or eGFR. According to the US National Institutes of Health, an eGFR of 60 or above is considered normal in adults. From a drug development perspective, eGFR is an approval endpoint in kidney indications such as IgAN. In kidney transplantation, 12-month eGFR is the strongest single predictor of future graft failure, with eGFRs below approximately 55 having an increased risk of graft failure, with the risk increasing almost exponentially the lower the eGFR. eGFR after kidney transplant has also been correlated to hospitalization risk, where each 10-point decrease in 6-month eGFR was associated with an 11% increased risk of hospitalization in the year after the 6-month transplant follow-up visit. Published kidney transplant longitudinal studies and prior kidney transplant clinical trials have reported a post-transplant mean eGFR using standard of care in the 50s.
These results have also demonstrated that eGFR levels measured as early as 90 days are similar to the mean eGFR levels observed at six months and one year post-transplant. As D.A. stated, tomorrow we will release the initial open label data from our ongoing phase 1b kidney transplant study at the World Congress of Nephrology. Results from the first three participants at the time of data submission to the conference demonstrated no incidents of acute rejection at 56, 167, and 232 days. Graft function was very good in all three participants, with the participants having eGFRs of 54, 85, and 77 at the latest available time points of 49, 155, and 217 days respectively.
In terms of adverse events deemed by the investigators to be related to drug, one participant developed BK viremia, a common occurrence after kidney transplant related to the combination of immunosuppressive drugs utilized to prevent rejection and reported to occur in over 20% of patients. Although the subject's viral load was decreasing, the treating physician elected to remove them from the study on day 55 and put them back on standard of care with tacrolimus. This participant's serum creatinine remained in the normal range at the institution where he was being managed throughout, and nephropathy was never suspected. A second participant elected to discontinue the study after 33 weeks for reasons not attributed to tegoprubart or related to her kidney function.
We'll provide additional details on these subjects in our presentation tomorrow, and we will continue to report additional data on graft function and survival from this study at future scientific conferences. In terms of enrollment, our trial designs includes a mandatory 28-day safety observation and evaluation period for our first three participants that requires a DSMB review of the data prior to enrolling the next participant. Our fourth kidney transplant participant enrolled in early March. We'll now anticipate the pace of enrollment to increase since we are no longer have the prior safety and observation period. Last year, we received clearance from the FDA to evaluate tegoprubart in a randomized multicenter open label active control study to assess the safety and efficacy of tegoprubart compared with tacrolimus and the prevention of allograft function after kidney transplantation.
120 participants will be randomized 1 to 1 to receive either tegoprubart via intravenous infusion every 21 days or twice-daily oral tacrolimus. The primary endpoint will compare the mean eGFR at 12 months for participants receiving tegoprubart versus tacrolimus. Secondary objectives will include safety and tolerability, participant and graft survival, biopsy proven acute rejection, and the incidence of new onset diabetes mellitus after transplant. We anticipate initiating this phase II study known as BESTOW in the middle of the year. As DA mentioned, this trial design includes an open label extension allowing for the collection of long-term efficacy and safety data, both from the phase II as well as the ongoing phase 1b trial.
In addition to the phase 1b kidney data we'll be sharing this weekend at the World Congress of Nephrology, we will also release safety data from our phase II trial evaluating tegoprubart in people with IgA nephropathy or IgAN. This snapshot looks up the safety data on the first 16 enrolled participants in the 10 mg per kg dosing cohort, with four participants having completed at least 24 weeks on treatment and five others having completed at least 12 weeks. The available data suggests that tegoprubart is safe and well-tolerated at this dose in this population of people with IgA nephropathy. To date, there are only 2 adverse events deemed related to drug, and there have been no serious and no severe adverse events reported. I will wrap up with a few words about our preclinical work on xenotransplantation.
Xenografts from genetically modified pigs have become a promising solution to the lack of human organs available for transplantation, but the primary challenge has been rejection. To decrease rejection risks, pigs have been bred with a variety of genetic knockouts, but immunosuppression is still needed, and the use of anti-CD40 Ligand antibodies have been particularly effective for controlling humoral and cellular responses to porcine antigen in non-human primate models of organ transplantation. Our collaboration with eGenesis, a leader in the xeno space, will allow us to test tegoprubart in a large range of transplant models using their modified pig organs and cells. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Paul for a financial update.
Thank you, Steve. The company reported a net loss of $58.4 million or $4.09 per share for the three months ended December 31, 2022, compared to a net loss of $8.8 million or $0.59 per share for the same period in 2021. The net loss for the three months ended December 31, 2022, includes a non-cash goodwill impairment charge totaling $48.6 million. Excluding the non-cash impairment charge, net loss would be $9.7 million or $0.68 per share. Research and development expenses were $7.3 million for the three months ended December 31, 2022, compared to $6.2 million for the comparable period in 2021, an increase of $1.1 million.
The increase was primarily due to an increase in manufacturing costs related to the increased production of clinical trial materials. G&A expenses were $2.8 million for the three months ended December 31, 2022, compared to $3.2 million for the comparable period in 2021, a decrease of $400,000. The decrease primarily reflects a decrease in headcount costs, stock-based compensation costs and professional fees. During the three months ended December 31, 2022, we recorded a non-cash goodwill impairment charge totaling $48.6 million for the full write-down of our goodwill balance. I'll now turn to a few key financial metrics for the full year.
The company reported a net loss of $88 million or $6.16 per share for the year ended December 31, 2022, compared to a net loss of $34.5 million or $2.33 per share in 2021. The net loss for the year ended December 31, 2022, includes a non-cash goodwill impairment charge totaling $48.6 million. Excluding the non-cash impairment charge, net loss would be $39.3 million or $2.75 per share. Research and development expenses were $27.1 million for the year ended December 31, 2022, compared to $23.7 million for 2021, an increase of $3.4 million.
The increase was primarily due to higher clinical development expenses, primarily with external CROs, an increase in personnel costs, including stock-based compensation costs, and an increase in manufacturing costs related to the increased production of clinical trial materials. G&A expenses were $12.7 million for the year ended December 31st, 2022, compared to $13.1 million for 2021, a decrease of $400,000. The decrease was primarily due to a decrease in personnel costs and a decrease in professional consulting fees, partially offset by increase in stock-based compensation costs and general operating expenses. Eledon ended the year with approximately $56.4 million in cash and cash equivalents.
We now have less than one year of cash runway under our current operational plan. As such, the execution and timing of the studies which we discussed on this call are all subject to financing. With that financial update, I'll turn the call back over to DA.
Thanks, Paul. I am proud of the progress we made as a company in 2022. With our renewed strategic focus on the opportunity for tegoprubart in kidney transplantation, we believe 2023 has the potential to be transformative for Eledon. We are highly encouraged by the results to date from our ongoing phase 1b trial evaluating tegoprubart as a novel component of an immunosuppressive regimen in kidney transplant recipients. The data provide significant clinical validation to our approach of inhibiting the CD40 ligand and reinforce our belief in tegoprubart's potential to transform the management of patients receiving organ transplants. I'll now ask the operator to begin our Q&A session. Operator?
We will now begin the question-and-answer session. As a reminder, to ask a question, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Today's first question comes from Pete Stavropoulos with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please proceed.
Hi, DA, Steve, and Paul. Thank you for taking my questions. Nice to hear that the eGFR values were so high. You know, suggests efficacy for Tego. The first question I have is, you know, what other data can we expect to see from tomorrow's presentation? Can you provide a little more color on measures of efficacy, or you may show like biomarkers of inflammation or other biomarkers that may have a predictive value? Then also, you know, what's been your KOL feedback on this data?
Thank you for the question. It's DA. Let me turn that over to Steve.
Yeah, thanks, Pete. At the presentation, we're really focusing on eGFR data right now, which, as you point out, was very, very good function for our first set of patients. The rest of the study for the trans phase 1b study is safety and tolerability. We're not overly gonna focus on biomarker, additional biomarker work at this time because eGFR is a very predictable biomarker of kidney function.
Okay. thanks.
We will show eGFR at various time points for each of the three participants. You'll be able to see how they were doing at a month or three months, et cetera.
Okay. I look forward to that. Yeah. Another question I have is, you know, CD40 ligand, you know, it's expressed on CD40, CD4+ T cells, you know. When you block it, you know, not only do you prevent like pro-inflammatory differentiation, you know, a proportion of the cells also seem to convert to FOXP3 positive regulatory T cells that secrete cytokines and sort of create a tolerogenic environment, you know. The question is, you know, from the ALS study and/or preclinical studies, you know, did you observe any of those changes in cytokines, you know, that suggest the tolerogenic environment is sort of being created?
Do you want me to take a pass at that one, DA?
Please.
Another great question, Pete, and yes, when you block CD40 ligand, there's lots of preclinical examples that it does. Change the polarization of CD4-positive cells from pro-inflammatory to regulatory cells, but they tend not to be in circulation. In the context of transplant rejection, you would actually see them in the kidney, and you would actually have to see that by biopsy. At this point, as you know, we're not going to do biopsies. It's not part of the protocol.
There are no protocol biopsies in the study. Should a PI choose to do a biopsy at that point in time, we may have that available to do further work. Similarly in the ALS study, again, you wouldn't tend to see it in circulation, whereas which is where we did show a reduction in pro-inflammatory markers. In ALS, you would probably see those Treg population shifts in tissues where you're modulating the immune system. In the case of the animal data, I would suggest that it would be in skeletal muscle.
Okay, thanks. Just one question on the BESTOW study. You know, I know that you're evaluating if there's gonna be a difference between the rate of new-onset diabetes, you know, after transplantation, in the tegoprubart arm versus CNI arm. You know, can you just help me understand why there would be a difference in new-onset diabetes after transplant in one arm versus the other? You know, what's the mechanism that drives the new-onset diabetes?
Sure. Steve?
I thought you were gonna take that one, DA. The thing that drives new-onset diabetes in these polypharmacy applications is toxicity to the beta cells that are in the pancreas. CNIs have particularly high toxicity to those beta cells that are in the pancreas that secrete insulin.
Okay. Is there anything else, you know, I mean, from my understanding, steroids may also, affect the development of, you know, post-transplant diabetes?
That is correct. Steroids do as well.
Okay. All right.
We have in our 2 trials, in the BESTOW trial, we will be across both tacrolimus arm as well as the tegoprubart arm. We'll be looking to taper the patients off steroids completely.
Okay. What's the timeframe of tapering off the patients, if you can disclose that?
It's pretty quick. It's a few months.
Okay. All right. Well, thank you for taking my questions, and, congratulations, and I look forward to seeing the data tomorrow.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Thomas Smith with SVB Leerink Securities. Please proceed.
Hey, guys. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the questions, congrats on the early data here. Just thanks for providing the latest available data points on those three patients. I was just wondering if you could just at a high level put a little bit more context around those reported eGFR rates and how those compare to current standard of care at those time points.
Sure.
No, go ahead. Go ahead, DA. Sorry.
eGFR rates have been shown their averages to be pretty stable in multiple longitudinal studies, typically in the 50s, with standard of care. That's now demonstrated to be the case both with some large patient population studies that have had as many as 20,000 patients in them, as well as with some historical clinical trials, including those that were done with belatacept and iscalimab.
Okay. Got it. Then, on safety, it sounds like you continue to have a pretty clean profile here. Haven't seen any SAEs, which is good. Just in terms of the AEs that have been deemed drug-related, any additional color you can provide on these or, do we just have to stay tuned for the presentations tomorrow?
I think the one that we pointed out was, we had a patient that had BK viremia. That is not an uncommon occurrence after transplant. Of course, the patient was immunosuppressed using at the time using triple therapy since they were on tegoprubart, as well as mycophenolate, and steroids. Overall, the safety and tolerability of tegoprubart continues to look good.
Okay. Great. Maybe just, one last question and appreciate the color on the enrollment and the DSMB review with the first three patients. Maybe you could just talk about, sort of your overall expectations in terms of pace of enrollment and, whether you think there's anything else that you would wanna do at this point to maybe augment enrollment pace into the study.
We expect with our phase 1b study to finish enrollment by the end of the year. Enrollment in transplant trials can be a little bit lumpy, since there's, there are some patients that might come in with plans transplants if they're receiving a kidney from a living donor. The majority of patients today receive a cadaveric donor. It becomes harder to plan for obvious reasons. The way one plans is by making sure that one has enough sites, and as a result, that the enough cases are being done at the various hospitals. Today we have 5 sites that we're using in 3 different countries for the phase 1b, and we expect that to be sufficient in order to be able to enroll our trial by year's end.
Of course, for the larger BESTOW study, we're going to be using many multiples of that amount of trials in multiple countries, but primarily the United States.
Understood. Super helpful. Thanks, DA. Appreciate the color and looking forward to the data presentations tomorrow.
Thanks, Tom.
The next question comes from Matt Kaplan with Ladenburg Thalmann. Please proceed.
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. Just a quick follow-up on phase 1b. Now with your, you know, first three data points coming out tomorrow, should we expect additional data as this is an open label study, during the course of the remainder of the year or will you just report data after you finish enrollment, after the end of the study?
Thanks, Matt. Appreciate the question. We plan on continuing to share data from this study over time. As we continue to get more patients and as we continue to get longer-term data, we will share them with both you and investors more broadly. We'll aim to do so at some of the larger conferences during the year.
Okay. Great. Thanks.
That'll be true probably later on this year as well as in future years. What's exciting is it's over time, this population of up to 12 participants will allow us to generate significant data.
In terms of the expected timeline, you're alluding to this a little bit for the BESTOW phase II study that you're gonna start, I guess, middle of this year. Can you give us a sense in terms of how that enrollment should track?
We expect that enrollment to take about a year and a half from the enrollment of the first patient.
Mm-hmm.
There would be a year to data since we're following the patients out a year. Last patient out would be a year later.
Thank you. I guess maybe a question for Steve. I guess given the recent ALS AdCom for a different product and the AdComs, the committee there, really looking like they would accept the light chain as a biomarker for efficacy. What are your thoughts on that for the go-for-cards in ALS and kind of next studies there?
Yeah, they seem to be open and receptive to NFL changes, but albeit not required. We didn't see it in the AMYX study as an example, yet they went ahead and approved it based on more traditional endpoints of ALSFRS. I think all studies are now incorporating it into their study designs. It's unclear at this point how long you have to go to really be confident that you'll see changes. It certainly appears you have to go at least six months. Most people are now incorporating that into their studies, we would certainly incorporate NFL into our future studies as well.
Great. Thanks for taking the questions and look forward to tomorrow's data presentation.
Thanks, Matt.
Thanks, Matt.
As a reminder, if you do have a question, please press star then one on your touchtone phone. The next question comes from Rami Katkhuda with LifeSci Capital. Please proceed.
Hey, guys. Congrats on the update, and thanks for taking my questions as well. Can you touch upon how quickly eGFR typically stabilizes post-kidney transplantation? Is eGFR, I guess, at earlier time points like mine, month one or three, consistent with values at 12 months and beyond?
Rami, thanks for the question. Steve?
Yeah. Hi, Rami. A great question. Yeah, it does appear as if once the organ stabilizes, that eGFR levels out around 90 days and beyond are very predictive and similar to what one would see at six months or 12 months. They tend to get fairly stable by that period of time. After transplant, like immediately after transplant in the first 30 to 60 days, they are shifting, and they bounce around a little bit as the organ settles in. Certainly by three months, it does appear they're fairly stable at that point.
It takes at least four weeks for the organs to really engraft.
Got it. I guess, are there any other key learnings from previous trials with iscalimab and belatacept that influences the design or expectations for BESTOW?
BESTOW, the protocol's already been approved. We have an approved protocol that we would plan on executing in multiple countries, but approval already here in the U.S., as you know. That design was based on primarily at the time, a wealth of data on the belatacept studies. That was probably the largest trials where data was available since tacrolimus was approved over 30 years ago. Much of the analyses was based on all of the data available from the belatacept studies.
Some of the learnings from looking at those trials, include the potential benefit of using ATG in combination with a costimulatory blocker like an anti-CD40 Ligand, and hence our use of ATG for induction. Another learning is the importance, in keeping the route of administration, the same. As such, we are going to continue developing an IV solution here.
I think one other learning as we've mentioned, and it's our primary endpoint, is the ability to utilize eGFR as an indicator of kidney function. That was very exciting data that was part of the belatacept studies.
Got it. Thank you guys again.
At this time, I am showing no further questioners in the queue. This does conclude our question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the conference back over to D.A. Gros for any closing remarks.
Thank you for your assistance, operator, and thank you all for joining us on today's call. Have a great e-afternoon and evening.
The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.