Capricor Therapeutics Inc. (CAPR) is having a good day. The company just released topline results from its pivotal Phase 3 HOPE-3 trial, and the numbers look genuinely encouraging for patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
Duchenne muscular dystrophy is about as rough as genetic disorders get. It's an inherited condition that causes progressive muscle weakness and degeneration, primarily hitting boys. Over time, patients lose the ability to walk and eventually face life-threatening complications, particularly heart problems.
That's what makes Capricor's investigational cell therapy, Deramiocel, potentially meaningful. The HOPE-3 study randomized 106 participants with an average age of around 15 years. They received either intravenous Deramiocel at 150 million cells per infusion or placebo every three months for 12 months.
The Results That Matter
Here's where things get interesting. Nearly 54% of patients showed a slowing of skeletal muscle disease progression. But the real standout was heart function: approximately 91% of patients showed a treatment effect on cardiomyopathy, which is the heart muscle disease that often proves fatal in DMD.
"The HOPE-3 study is the first-ever Phase 3 trial in a largely non-ambulatory population with DMD to successfully meet its primary endpoint and to support the development of an innovative therapy over many years, with this level of impact has been a profound privilege," said Craig McDonald, an investigator of the HOPE-3 trial.
Jonathan Soslow, Professor of Pediatrics (Cardiology) at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, emphasized the cardiac benefits: "The statistically and clinically significant preservation of left ventricular ejection fraction in patients treated with Deramiocel observed in HOPE-3 underscores the potential of Deramiocel to address one of the most critical aspects of the disease."
The FDA Complication
This positive data arrives with some context worth noting. Back in July, Capricor received a Complete Response Letter from the FDA regarding its Biologics License Application for Deramiocel. The agency basically said the application didn't meet the statutory requirement for substantial evidence of effectiveness, and that additional clinical data was needed. That rejection was based on data from the earlier HOPE-2 trial.
Now Capricor has exactly what the FDA asked for: additional clinical data from a properly powered Phase 3 study. The question becomes whether these HOPE-3 results will be sufficient to satisfy the agency's concerns and support a resubmission.
CAPR Price Action: Capricor Therapeutics shares jumped 8.96% to $6.93 during premarket trading on Wednesday.