Pharma News

Rocket Pharmaceuticals is ready for liftoff in the rare disease space

This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback.

Seven years ago, Rocket Pharmaceuticals was operating from a back conference room at a hedge fund in New York City, hoping to maybe get one or two innovative ideas to an IND. Today, the clinical-stage public biopharma focused on rare and ultra-rare childhood diseases is in a 100,000-plus-square-foot R&D and lab facility in Cranbury, New Jersey, with six genetic therapies in its pipeline, two of which are being readied for FDA submission this year.

Kinnari Patel, COO and president, who was Rocket employee No. 3, attributes the company’s success to following “good science.”

“We believe that we don’t know everything, and we need experts at the table to ask questions to and collaborate with and learn from. It’s a humble approach to drug development,” Patel, a PharmaVoice 100 honoree, said. “While all of us had done multiple drug development (programs) at Big Pharma before coming here, we realized we were entering a new territory in cell and gene therapy. But the core of our success has been working hand in hand with patients and patient communities.”

Rocket pushed past several roadblocks for one of its two lead compounds — LV RP-L201 — for leukocyte adhesion deficiency, an aggressive and fatal inherited immunodeficiency disease that affects 25 to 50 patients in the U.S. and Europe. Based on positive early data, Rocket engaged with investors, academia and patient groups to move the development program forward. The company even worked with the U.S. embassy during the COVID-19 pandemic to grant an exemption to a patient who otherwise would have been excluded from the study and who would have died.

Kinnari Patel Rocket Pharmaceuticals

Kinnari Patel, COO, president, Rocket Pharmaceuticals

Permission granted by Kinnari Patel

 

“Each of those patients’ lives depends on a therapy,” Patel said. “We worked with patient communities and experts around the world to get patients in the study and with FDA and EMA to design a study that was meaningful.”

Less than five years from first patient treated to top line data, Rocket submitted an IND for LV RP-L201 in 2018. Based on the positive efficacy and safety data from the phase 2 pivotal trial, Rocket anticipates a regulatory filing for the ex vivo lentiviral gene therapy candidate in the second quarter of 2023.

“For all nine patients, we have a 100% survival rate and zero patient hospitalizations post-therapy,” Patel said. “As a pharmacist, I’ve never seen that anywhere. They can be kids again, go to day care, go to school, get their ears pierced. To see this amazing product come to more patients next year feels like we are on the right mission of making rare disease therapies available to patients who really need them. This was a labor of love.”

Rocket is also bullish on its other lead product called RP-L102, an ex vivo lentiviral gene therapy candidate for Fanconi anemia (FA), which is a rare pediatric disease “characterized by bone marrow failure, malformations and cancer predisposition” — the disease often leads to death before patients reach the age of 10. Again, working with leading experts around the globe, regulators and patient advocacy groups, Rocket is preparing to submit its second drug to the FDA for approval later this year. 


“We believe that we don’t know everything, and we need experts at the table to ask questions to and collaborate with and learn from.”

Kinnari Patel

COO, president, Rocket Pharmaceuticals


“Fanconi anemia is a disease that we all learn about in medical school and pharmacy school because the cell and biology is so challenging,” Patel said. “DNA repair is really the core of the issue for this disease, but despite tons of research, people weren’t able to figure out a treatment.”

Rocket’s approach is to take a patient’s cells and genetically modify them to correct the bone marrow cells as a preventative measure before failure.

“We take patients’ cells, infuse them ex vivo and give them back to the patients within a week. And we are seeing (a) clean safety profile because they don’t have any condition regimen,” Patel explained. “These patients are doing great and the patient community is so excited about this because it impacts 5,000 to 7,000 patients around the U.S. and Europe.”

Source link
#Rocket #Pharmaceuticals #ready #liftoff #rare #disease #space

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *