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Woman of the Week: Stealth BioTherapeutics’ Reenie McCarthy

Welcome to the Woman of the Week podcast, a weekly discussion that illuminates the unique stories of women leaders who are catalyzing change throughout the life sciences industry. You can check out all our podcast episodes here.

Reenie McCarthy’s role as CEO at Stealth BioTherapeutics was supposed to be temporary. Now, 13 years later, she says leading the mitochondrial biology company has been one of the most challenging yet rewarding experiences of her career.

McCarthy came to Stealth through Morningside Venture Capital, which had been running the biotech in a “quasi-virtual manner.

“When the commitment was made in 2014 to build out the team to bring elamipretide, our lead compound, forward across a broad clinical proof of concept program, I stepped in on an interim basis to lead the team and it just clicked,” she said. “Preclinically across multiple disease models, elamipretide has shown benefit in neurodegeneration, cardiac and ophthalmic — understanding how to translate that in the clinic to see end-organ benefit for patients has been a journey.”

In 2023, McCarthy expects to submit an NDA for elamipretide in patients with Barth syndrome, an ultra-rare genetic disease that affects mostly children under 5 — fewer than 150 people in the U.S. and 250 people worldwide are diagnosed with the disease. Beyond Barth syndrome, the company is looking to complete enrollment in a phase 3 clinical trial for primary mitochondrial myopathy, which will read out next year.

“Another goal is to plan our future development strategy for dry age-related macular degeneration based on the exciting signals that we saw in a phase 2 clinical trial,” she said. “We’re also planning clinical trials that we hope to start in 2024 and in 2025, with elamipretide in new indications and with our pipeline compounds.”

McCarthy said the focus on Barth syndrome was driven in part by a patient advocacy group that approached Stealth back in 2014 based on data around the “lock and key mechanism” of the drug.

“It’s not a decision that you make lightly going into an ultra-rare disease, but we partnered with advocacy from the outset,” she said. “They’ve been beside us throughout the development journey, including extensive interactions with the FDA. It’s been a tremendous and rewarding partnership in many ways when we think about patient-focused drug development and our mission as a biotech company and (my mission) as a biotech CEO.”

Getting elamipretide to a fast-track designation was not without bumps in the road and required McCarthy to dig deep and stay the course after receiving disappointing data from an early-stage trial.

“We did not see the results we wanted to in a small, probably too-short phase 2 clinical trial, but we were hearing and seeing significant changes in the data in open-label extension,” McCarthy said. “We leaned in as a team and made a commitment to keep going in that disease, which is core to our mission as a company, our moral compass and defines in many ways the enthusiasm of our team and commitment to patients.”

Here, McCarthy talks about how she and her team navigated a complex regulatory pathway, why her commitment to the patient community is based on transparency and trust and how being a life-long learner has been critical to her success.

Welcome to WoW, the Woman of the Week podcast by PharmaVoice powered by Industry Dive.

In this episode, Taren Grom, editor in chief emeritus at PharmaVoice, meets with Reenie McCarthy, CEO, Stealth BioTherapeutics.

Taren: Reenie, welcome to the WoW podcast program.

Reenie: Thank you so much for having me. I really look forward to our conversation.

Taren: Me too. Tell me about Stealth Biotherapeutics’ rare disease drug for Barth syndrome, and how are you working with patient advocacy groups to move the therapeutic forward?

Reenie: Thanks for that question. So Barth syndrome is an ultra-rare genetic disease. It affects less than 150 people in the US and less than 250 people worldwide. Our drug is called elamipretide. And so for Barth syndrome, the genetic defect essentially results in a deficit of a phospholipid called cardiolipin, which is essential for mitochondrial structure and function. With that, 85% of affected children die by the age of 5; and if they survive early childhood they do suffer from significant skeletal muscle weakness, exercise intolerance and fatigue, and cardiac dysfunction. And most of the deaths in the disease do come from cardiac dysfunction. And again, even those children who survive early childhood in all cases lead a shortened life. So our drug elamipretide is a mitochondrial targeted drug which is actually targeting cardiolipin.

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