UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 8-K
CURRENT REPORT
Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported): January 13, 2020
AVROBIO, INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
Delaware | 001-38537 | 81-0710585 | ||
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation) |
(Commission File Number) |
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.) |
One Kendall Square
Building 300, Suite 201
Cambridge, MA 02139
(Address of principal executive offices, including zip code)
(617) 914-8420
(Registrants telephone number, including area code)
Not Applicable
(Former Name or Former Address, if Changed Since Last Report)
Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:
☐ | Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425) |
☐ | Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12) |
☐ | Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b)) |
☐ | Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c)) |
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each class |
Trading symbol(s) |
Name of each exchange on which registered | ||
Common Stock, $0.0001 par value per share | AVRO | Nasdaq Global Select Market |
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an emerging growth company as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933 (§ 230.405 of this chapter) or Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (§ 240.12b-2 of this chapter).
Emerging growth company ☒
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ☐
Item 7.01 | Regulation FD Disclosure. |
On January 13, 2020, AVROBIO, Inc. updated its corporate presentation for use in meetings with investors, analysts and others. A copy of the slide presentation is furnished as Exhibit 99.1 to this Current Report on Form 8-K.
The information in this Item 7.01 and Exhibit 99.1 attached hereto is intended to be furnished and shall not be deemed filed for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the Exchange Act) or otherwise subject to the liabilities of that section, nor shall it be deemed incorporated by reference in any filing under the Securities Act of 1933 or the Exchange Act, except as expressly set forth by specific reference in such filing.
Item 9.01 | Financial Statements and Exhibits. |
(d) Exhibits
99.1 | AVROBIO, Inc. slide presentation, dated January 13, 2020. |
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.
AVROBIO, INC. | ||||||
Date: January 13, 2020 | By: | /s/ Geoff MacKay | ||||
Geoff MacKay | ||||||
President and Chief Executive Officer |
Freedom from a lifetime of disease Corporate Presentation January 2020 Exhibit 99.1
Disclaimer This presentation has been prepared by AVROBIO, Inc. (“AVROBIO”) for informational purposes only and not for any other purpose. Certain information contained in this presentation and statements made orally during this presentation relate to or are based on studies, publications, surveys and other data obtained from third-party sources and AVROBIO’s own internal estimates and research. While AVROBIO believes these third-party sources to be reliable as of the date of this presentation, it has not independently verified, and AVROBIO makes no representation as to the adequacy, fairness, accuracy or completeness of any information obtained from third-party sources. While AVROBIO believes its internal research is reliable, such research has not been verified by any independent source. This presentation may contain forward-looking statements made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements may be identified by words and phrases such as “aims,” “anticipates,” “believes,” “could,” “designed to,” “estimates,” “expects,” “forecasts”, “goal,” “intends,” “may” “plans,” “possible,” “potential,” “seeks,” “will,” and variations of these words and phrases or similar expressions that are intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements include, without limitation, statements regarding our business strategy, prospective products and goals, the therapeutic potential of our investigational gene therapies, the design, commencement, enrollment and timing of ongoing or planned clinical trials, clinical trial results, product approvals and regulatory pathways, potential regulatory approvals and the timing thereof, anticipated benefits of our gene therapy platform including potential impact on our commercialization activities, the expected benefits and results of our implementation of the plato platform in our clinical trials and gene therapy programs, the expected safety profile of our investigational gene therapies, timing and likelihood of success, plans and objectives of management for future operations, future results of anticipated products, and the market opportunity for and anticipated commercial activities relating to our investigational gene therapies, and statements regarding the Company’s financial and cash position and expected cash reserves. Any such statements in this presentation that are not statements of historical fact may be deemed to be forward-looking statements. Any forward-looking statements in this presentation are based on AVROBIO’s current expectations, estimates and projections about our industry as well as management’s current beliefs and expectations of future events only as of today and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially and adversely from those set forth in or implied by such forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the risk that any one or more of AVROBIO’s investigational gene therapies will not be successfully developed or commercialized, the risk of cessation or delay of any ongoing or planned clinical trials of AVROBIO or our collaborators or of encountering challenges in the enrollment or dosing in such clinical trials, the risk that AVROBIO may not realize the intended benefits of our gene therapy platform, the risk that our investigational gene therapies or procedures in connection with the administration thereof will not have the safety or efficacy profile that we anticipate, the risk that prior results, such as signals of safety, activity or durability of effect, observed from preclinical or clinical trials, will not be replicated or will not continue in ongoing or future studies or trials involving AVROBIO’s investigational gene therapies, the risk that we will be unable to obtain and maintain regulatory approvals for our investigational gene therapies, the risk that the size and growth potential of the market for our investigational gene therapies will not materialize as expected, risks associated with our dependence on third-party suppliers and manufacturers, risks regarding the accuracy of our estimates of expenses and future revenue, risks relating to our capital requirements and needs for additional financing, and risks relating to our ability to obtain and maintain intellectual property protection for our investigational gene therapies. For a discussion of these and other risks and uncertainties, and other important factors, any of which could cause AVROBIO’s actual results to differ from those contained in the forward-looking statements, see the section entitled “Risk Factors” in AVROBIO’s most recent Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, as well as discussions of potential risks, uncertainties and other important factors in AVROBIO’s subsequent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. AVROBIO explicitly disclaims any obligation to update any forward-looking statements except to the extent required by law. Note regarding trademarks: plato is a trademark of AVROBIO. Other trademarks referenced in this presentation are the property of their respective owners.
Just as enzyme replacement therapies (ERTs) revolutionized the past, gene therapy has the potential to revolutionize the future. 'S MISSION: To cure rare disease in a single dose
Reported initial data, including 87% substrate reduction in first kidney biopsy 9 patients dosed to date Continue to report data, including initial platoTM patient data Gain clarity on potential regulatory approval pathway 2019 Accomplishments …entered 2019 with one program in clinic generating data across 3 clinical programs in 2020… IND: Investigational New Drug 2020 Anticipated Milestones GAUCHER CYSTINOSIS POMPE FABRY First patient dosed Rolled out platoTM platform Dosed first patient under platoTM platform Initiated patient recruitment Expanded management team Strengthened balance sheet with $138 million follow-on offering Report initial patient data Report initial patient data Complete pre-clinical IND-enabling activities Dose patients across Fabry and Gaucher trials under platoTM platform Manufacture on 3 continents Hold first AVROBIO “R&D Day” Initiated pre-clinical IND-enabling study Building value across pipeline and platform
Steady stream of clinical programs Investigational Gene Therapy Proof-of-Concept IND-Enabling Phase 1/2 Commercial Rights Fabry AVR-RD-01 AVROBIO Gaucher AVR-RD-02 AVROBIO Cystinosis AVR-RD-04 AVROBIO Pompe AVR-RD-03 AVROBIO 10 patients dosed; 3 programs actively recruiting
Addressing multi-billion dollar markets Disease Est. Cost Per Patient Per Year Approx. 2018 Net Sales Selected Companies Fabry $1.4B Gaucher $1.4B Pompe $1B Cystinosis $0.2B CURRENT STANDARD OF CARE COSTS Sources: Rombach S et al, Orphanet J Rare Dis, 2013; van Dussen L et al, Orphanet J Rare Dis, 2014; WAC pricing from Redbook; 2018 Net Sales from company annual and other reports *= for Horizon’s Procysbi oral therapy (delayed release cysteamine bitartrate) Note: Shire acquired by Takeda in 2019 $320k $250k-400k $500k $625k-700k*
One approach applied across our portfolio Transduce with lentiviral vector carrying normal gene GENE THERAPY APPROACH Select CD34+ stem cells Collect mobilized blood 3 2 1 Harvest and freeze 4 Infuse 5
plato™ –– AVROBIO’s foundation for worldwide commercialization Beginning-to-end manufacturing platform Redefines manufacturing best practices Optimized for performance
platoTM designed to durably express functional protein throughout the body and brain BONE MARROW Potential for widespread microglia engraftment throughout the brain MICROGLIA PERIPHERAL TISSUE Mature Blood Cells Enzyme Neuron Microglia Enzyme Astrocyte Lymphocyte Granulocyte Bloodstream Monocyte Enzyme Macrophage Mature cells area Progenitors area HSC area Bone TRANSDUCED CD34+ CELLS Viscera CNS/PNS IN THE BONE MARROW Busulfan eliminates hematopoietic (CD34+) stem cells making space for gene-modified cells BRAIN Busulfan crosses blood-brain barrier and eliminates resident microglia cells making space for gene-modified cells
platoTM designed to deliver differentiated, cost-effective approach to large-scale gene therapy manufacturing Drug product production Scalable, global production suites Frozen in aliquots to streamline supply chain CD 34+ hematopoietic stem cells Vector production Large bioreactor 200 liter serum-free suspension culture Automated, closed system Vector with disease-specific transgene OPTIMIZE STEM CELL QUALITY HIGH VOLUME / TITRE 1 2 3 COST-EFFECTIVE SCALE-OUT Cryopreserved to enable convenient dosing Illustrative * European manufacturing capabilities planned for 2H 2020; manufacturing capabilities currently in place in U.S. & Australia *
DRUG PRODUCT Poised to manufacture at commercial scale VECTOR (200 L scale bioreactor runs (109 titre)) 4 production suites ~12 runs per year per suite ~50 patients per run 2,400 PATIENTS ANNUALLY 3 global production suites 8 automated units per suite 100 patients per unit per year 2,400 PATIENTS ANNUALLY Illustrative
Two AVR-RD-01 Fabry clinical trials 9 patients dosed across Phases 1 and 2 PHASE 1 Investigator-Sponsored Trial* PHASE 2 AVRO – FAB-201 Trial Patients Patients Key Objective Key Objectives n = 5 (fully enrolled) On ERT > 6 months prior to enrollment 18 - 50 year-old males n = 8-12 (4 patients dosed to-date) Treatment-naive 16 - 50 year-old males Safety and preliminary efficacy Safety and efficacy July 2019 data presented, unless otherwise specified * Sponsored by FACTs team (Fabry Disease Clinical Research and Therapeutics) in Canada
FAB-201 Patient 1: 87% substrate reduction in kidney biopsy Average number of Gb3 inclusions per peritubular capillary (PTC) Baseline 1 Year (48 weeks) Baseline: The last available, non-missing observation prior to AVR-RD-01 infusion Note: With respect to Fabry disease, Gb3 inclusions per PTC is interchangeable with GL-3 inclusions per KIC FAB-201-1: First patient in FAB-201 clinical trial 3.55 0.47 Unpaired t test for difference between n=55 PTCs at baseline vs. n=101 PTCs at 1 year; p < 0.0001 Error bar represents the standard deviation 3.55
KIDNEY FUNCTION remains within normal range FAB-201 Patient 1: Kidney and cardiac function stable at one year CARDIAC FUNCTION remains within normal range Reference Range Mean Values ± SD EF (%) LVM (g) LVMI (g/m2) Male (20-39 years) 64.3 ± 4.2 138.9 ± 24.5 67.8 ± 10.7 mGFR mL/min/1.73 m2 eGFR mL/min/1.73 m2 EF (%) LV Mass (Absolute) (g) LV Mass Index (Normalized) (g/m2) Normal Range mGFR/eGFR Male (20-29 years) Average 116* Source: https://www.kidney.org/atoz/content/gfr Note: mGFR is measured Glomerular Filtration Rate; eGFR is estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate Source: Alfakih K et al, J Magn Reson Imaging, 2003 Note: EF is Ejection Fraction; LVMI is Left Ventricular Mass Index
Gene Therapy FAB-201 Patient 1: Substantial reduction in plasma substrate / metabolite levels, sustained at 1 year Plasma Lyso-Gb3 87% Reduction Plasma Gb3 73% Reduction Gene Therapy Infuse AVR-RD-01 Day 0 Baseline: The last available, non-missing observation prior to AVR-RD-01 infusion Note: AVR-RD-01 is an investigational gene therapy nM nM Infuse AVR-RD-01 Day 0
Anti-AGA antibodies Transient low titer in 1 subject (resolved) AEs and SAEs reported AEs Generally consistent with myeloablative conditioning, underlying disease or pre-existing conditions SAEs Pre-treatment Seizure (resolved) Post-treatment Dehydration, nausea, vomiting (resolved) Febrile neutropenia (resolved) FAB-201 No unexpected trends or safety events identified No AEs or SAEs related to AVR-RD-01 drug product Note: Safety database cut as of July 10, 2019 for the first 3 patients dosed
Two AVR-RD-01 Fabry clinical trials 9 patients dosed across Phases 1 and 2 PHASE 1 Investigator-Sponsored Trial* Patients Patients Key Objective Key Objectives n = 5 (fully enrolled) On ERT > 6 months prior to enrollment 18 - 50 year-old males n = 8-12 (4 patients dosed to-date) Treatment-naive 16 - 50 year-old males Safety and preliminary efficacy Safety and efficacy * Sponsored by FACTs team (Fabry Disease Clinical Research and Therapeutics) in Canada PHASE 2 AVRO – FAB-201 Trial
Phase 1: Plasma lyso-Gb3 reduction sustained >2 yrs Reduced 41% from ERT baseline* ERT No ERT Gene Rx ERT + Gene Therapy Gene Therapy Infuse AVR-RD-01 ERT Discontinued ERT-Lyso-Gb3 Range *Baseline: The mean of the values reported prior to initiating mobilization Note: AVR-RD-01 is an investigational gene therapy candidate Day 0 18 Mo Patient #1
Phase 1: Plasma lyso-Gb3 consistently reduced by 33-41% vs. baseline* ERT at 6+ months post AVR-RD-01 treatment PATIENT 1 – OFF ERT 41% Reduction PATIENT 3 – OFF ERT 41% Reduction PATIENT 2 – ON ERT 38% Reduction ERT Lyso-Gb3 Range Baseline PATIENT 4 – ON ERT** 33% Reduction *Baseline: The mean of the values reported prior to initiating mobilization Percent reduction: As measured from baseline to last assessment **Patient 4 discontinued ERT 7 months after gene therapy dose ERT Lyso-Gb3 Range ERT Lyso-Gb3 Range ERT Lyso-Gb3 Range
Phase 1: Leukocyte and plasma enzyme activity sustained >2 years; VCN stable VCN Infuse AVR-RD-01 Day 0 Plasma AGA Activity (nmol/hr/mL) Leukocyte AGA Activity (nmoles/hr/mg) VCN (per cell) Plasma AGA Activity Leukocyte AGA Activity Patient #1 Infuse AVR-RD-01 Day 0 Note: 0.1 VCN is indicative of approx. 5-10% of all nucleated cells having an average of 1-2 copies of the transgene
Phase 1: Leukocyte and plasma enzyme activity levels trend consistently across all patients Patient 1 Patient 2 Patient 3 Patient 4 Patient 5 Day 0 Infuse AVR-RD-01 Day 0 Note: Enzyme measurements are taken at ERT troughs; Note: Dotted line illustrative only Patient #5’s Day 12 data point was utilized since the one month data was not obtained 28 Mo
Investigator-sponsored* Phase 1/2 study in Cystinosis OBJECTIVES PATIENTS ASSESS Safety Efficacy 6 patients Adults and potentially adolescents 14–17 years old Using oral and ophthalmic cysteamine Cystine levels in granulocytes Vector Copy Number (VCN) Chimerism Renal, respiratory and endocrine function, ophthalmologic findings, muscle strength, growth, bone density, neurologic and psychometric measures Safety A Phase 1/2 study to determine the safety and efficacy of transplantation with autologous human CD34+ Hematopoietic Stem Cells (HSC) from Mobilized Peripheral Blood Stem Cells (PBSC) of patients with Cystinosis modified by ex vivo transduction using the pCCL-CTNS lentiviral vector Weeks 6-14 Months 6, 12, 18 & 24 Safety & efficacy assessments Day -140 Discontinue cysteamine eye drops Day -70 Mobilize stem cells Day -20 Discontinue oral cysteamine Day -5 Conditioning Day 0 Infuse AVR-RD-04 Day 28 Post-treatment assessment CYSTINOSIS PATIENTS * Sponsored by UCSD
Cystinosis is a serious, underserved rare disease Current treatment options are inadequate, burdensome, and treat symptoms only Standard of care cysteamine (a cystine-depleting therapy) delays, but does not halt, progression to end-stage renal disease Significant compliance challenges due to: Frequency of dosing (Cystagon 4x per day, Procysbi 2x per day, hourly eye drops) Side effects, including bad breath and skin odor Corneal cystine crystals Excessive thirst, Dehydration, hypothyroidism Elevated cystine in white blood cells Fanconi syndrome, kidney failure Excessive urination Failure to thrive, rickets Most common inherited cause of renal Fanconi syndrome (onset of symptoms by 6-12 months of age) Overall incidence ranges from 1 in 100,000 to 200,000 newborns 2,000 patients estimated worldwide; 500 to 600 patients estimated in the U.S. Sources: Wilmer MJ et al, Pediatr Nephrol, 2011, National Institutes of Health, Horizon Therapeutics plc
NORMAL LYSOSOME CYSTINOSIS LYSOSOME Cystinosis caused by defective gene that encodes cystinosin, an exporter protein Cysteine (monomer of cystine) Cystine (dimer) Functional exporter protein (Cystinosin) Defective exporter protein (Cystinosin) Cystine crystals Causes cystine crystals to build up in lysosomes, leading to tissue and organ damage
GAU-201: Phase 1/2 study in Gaucher Type 1 patients GAUCHER DISEASE TYPE 1 ERT-STABLE and TREATMENT NAÏVE PATIENTS OBJECTIVES PATIENTS ASSESS Safety Engraftment Efficacy (functional endpoints and biomarkers) Evaluate need for ERT re-initiation 8-16 patients 16-35 year old males and females Two arms Treatment naïve Stable receiving ERT Vector Copy Number (VCN) Chimerism GCase activity, including in CSF Efficacy Hematologic values End-organ volumes and BMD Biomarkers and QoL Safety An adaptive, open-label, multinational phase 1/2 study of the safety and efficacy of ex vivo, lentiviral vector mediated gene therapy AVR-RD-02 for patients with Type 1 Gaucher disease Day -4 Conditioning Day 0 Infuse AVR-RD-02 Day 28 Post-treatment assessment Months 3, 6, 9 & 12 Safety & efficacy assessments Day -60 Mobilize stem cells Patients on ERT: ERT discontinued D -14
Incomplete therapeutic response is common: 60% of patients failed to achieve at least one of the six therapeutic goals evaluated after 4+ years of ERT1 A clinically significant percentage of patients continue to exhibit bone pain, organomegaly and cytopenia after 10 years of ERT2 25% of patients continue to suffer from physical limitations after two years of ERT, primarily due to bone disease3 Persistence after 10 years ERT† Non-splenectomized Patients Splenectomized Patients Anemia 12.4% 8.8% Thrombocytopenia* 22.7% 0.7% Splenomegaly* 38.3% N/A Hepatomegaly* 14.3% 18.8% Bone Pain 42.9% 62.5% Bone Crisis 7.4% 16.7% * Higher persistence rates observed when more severe manifestations were present at baseline † Persistence refers to the presence of anemia, bone pain, bone crisis, or at least moderate thrombocytopenia, splenomegaly, or hepatomegaly, present after 10 years of ERT among those with baseline involvement of these parameters (from a registry of 757 GD1 patients; Weinreb et al., 2013). Following 10 years of treatment, ~26% of patients were receiving between 45-150 U/kg EOW, and 96% of these individuals were receiving doses between 45-90 U/kg EOW. Despite standard-of-care ERT, disease progression continues and unmet need remains. GD1: Gaucher Disease Type 1; SOC: Standard of Care; ERT: Enzyme Replacement Therapy; EOW: Every Other Week Sources: 1Weinreb N et al. Amer J Hematol, 2008; 2Weinreb N et al. J Inherit Metab Dis, 2013; 3Giraldo P et al. Qual Life Res, 2005. Long-term follow-up study highlights significant unmet need in Gaucher Type 1
Sources: KOL Interviews; market research KOL: Key Opinion Leader; SRT: Substrate Reduction Therapy Long-term Complications “ERT has extended lifespan, but now we are seeing complications that arise over time, like Parkinson’s.” – KOL Increased risk of Parkinson’s Disease or Parkinson-like symptoms has emerged as a clear unmet need in GD1 Additionally, GD1 patients are at increased risk of neurological issues beyond Parkinson’s Disease, such as cognitive decline and neuropathy Risk of Parkinson’s Disease “A one-time treatment could be easier on the patient and might also even help address cost concerns.” – KOL Chronic treatment is often burdensome for GD1 patients, requiring infusions every two weeks and/or close compliance with oral SRTs throughout life Additionally, there are substantial healthcare costs associated with treating GD1, given cost of chronic ERT Need for inconvenient, lifelong treatment Ongoing cost to healthcare system Treatment Burden “Bone pain is the single most intractable manifestation of GD1, and some patients even develop osteonecrosis or fractures.” – KOL Bone crises are particularly concerning and can occur despite ERT/SRT, particularly among patients who have previously had a bone crisis Furthermore, bone pain often persists long after ERT initiation and can impact quality of life Persistent bone pain despite ERT Risk of bone crisis Skeletal Manifestations Risk of Neurological Abnormalities KOLs cite numerous unmet needs in Gaucher Type 1, including bone pain/crisis
Gaucher Type 1 patients on SOC have significant unmet needs and are concerned about disease progression GBA-Parkinson’s: Glucosylceramidase Beta Parkinson’s; CBC: Complete Blood Count; GI: Gastrointestinal; Hgb: Hemoglobin Sources: Chen Zion et al. Orphanet J Rare Dis (2016) 11: 53 “There are days when I can’t get up from my chair. I must speak to customers on the phone instead of visiting them in person.” – 38 year old living with GD1 Bone pain and fatigue are the most debilitating unmet needs Patients have a real fear of developing GBA-Parkinson’s Some patients have experienced significant GI issues (potentially a neurologic manifestation) If gene therapy can address these factors, patients could gain significant quality-of-life back Key Takeaways from Patient Focus Group AVROBIO Gaucher Patient Focus Group November 16, 2019 Physicians and Patients Answer Differently When Asked About Unmet Needs CBC: 8.2* Bone pain: 8.0 Liver/spleen volume: 7.4 Bone density: 6.9 Biomarkers: 6.4 Fatigue: 5.8 Fatigue: 7.6* Bone pain: 7.3 Liver/spleen volume: 6.4 Bone density: 6.2 Biomarkers: 4.8 CBC: 4.0 Physician Patient *It is noted that physicians ascribed greater importance to testing of Hgb/platelets than did patients. Anemia is both correctable and can be measured objectively and is a cause of fatigue.
Milestones anticipated across the pipeline in 2020 FABRY Continued recruitment in FAB-201 Next data release to be held at WORLDSymposium in February GAUCHER Enroll first patient in GAU-201 in Q1 2020 with dosing in Q2 2020 Report initial patient data Continued enrollment in investigator-sponsored trial Report initial patient data Complete pre-clinical IND-enabling activities CYSTINOSIS POMPE
Appendix
Hematopoietic reconstitution occurs in two distinct phases A few thousand long-term engrafting cells stably sustain levels of transgene product First wave of short-term progenitor cells start to exhaust with progressive takeover by a smaller population of long-term engrafting cells Source: Biasco L et al, Cell Stem Cell, 2016 Clonal Population Time after GT (months) 6 - 12 24 - 48 0 - 3 Long-term engrafting cells Short-term progenitor cells
Precedent for use of kidney biopsy data for FDA approval of drug candidate for Fabry disease Classic Fabry disease (AGA activity <1%) NOTE: For informational purposes; differences exist between trial designs and subject populations; AVROBIO has not conducted any head-to-head trials comparing migalastat to AVR-RD-01 Classic Fabry patient level data 0-6 months randomized clinical trial and 6-12 months open label extension 28% average reduction (at 6 months from baseline) 46% average reduction (average of patients with 12 month data) 7/9 males ≥ 50% reduction (at 6 months from baseline) 45 Amenable patients* (16 males / 29 females) Migalastat approved on % reduction in GL-3 inclusions per KIC as compared to placebo Group Migalastat (BL –M6) Placebo (BL –M6) Males (N=16) 5/7 (71%) -1.10 (-1.94, -0.02) 4/9 (44%) -0.03 (-1.00, 1.69) Patients with baseline GL-3 ≥ 0.3 (N=17; 9 males, 8 females) 7/9 (78%) -0.91 (-1.94, 0.19) 2/8 (25%) -0.02 (-1.00, 1.69) Patients with baseline GL-3 < 0.3 (N=28; 7 males, 21 females) 6/16 (38%) -0.02 (-0.10, 0.26) 7/12 (58%) -0.05 (-0.16, 0.14) Treatment Group n Baseline Median (min, max) Month 6 Median (min, max) Change from Baseline Median (min, max) Average number of GL-3 inclusions per KIC (N=13) Galafold 7 3.6 (0.2, 6.0) 2.6 (0.1, 6.0) -0.7 (-1.7, 1.2) Placebo 6 1.8 (0.1, 2.8) 2.0 (0.05, 4.3) -0.04 (-0.5, 1.5) Male Patients with the Classic Phenotype Migalastat (Months 0-24) Placebo (Months 0-6) → Migalastat (Months 6-24) #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 #7 #8 #9 #10 #11 #12 #13 #14 PTC GL-3 inclusions at BL 0.16 0.03 n/a 5.69 1.22 n/a 2.88 2.41 1.55 0.16 0.03 0.11 0.94 0.88 Change in PTC GL-3 inclusions from BL to M6 -0.08 0.01 n/a -1.77 -1.10 n/a -1.25 1.21 -0.21 0.01 0.09 -0.07 1.94 -0.83 Change in PTC GL-3 inclusions from BL/M6b to M12 -0.12 n/a n/a -1.92 n/a n/a -0.81 -0.94 -1.13 -0.09 -0.05 n/a -2.28 0.06 Source: Germain D et al, Genetics in Medicine, 2019