Acadia Pharmaceuticals has expanded its licensing agreement with Neuren Pharmaceuticals to acquire global rights to NNZ-2591, a development candidate for Rett syndrome and Fragile X syndrome. Acadia, the global leader in addressing Rett syndrome, launched the first FDA-approved therapy for the condition, called DAYBUE, in the United States. The expanded agreement grants Acadia exclusive worldwide rights to NNZ-2591 and supports its strategy to expand its rare disease business. Acadia plans to submit a New Drug Submission for trofinetide in Canada and explore opportunities in Europe, Asia, and other regions. The agreement includes an upfront payment of $100 million to Neuren and additional milestone and royalty payments.
Acadia Pharmaceuticals Inc. (NASDAQ: ACAD) today announced that it has expanded its current licensing agreement for trofinetide with Neuren Pharmaceuticals to acquire ex-North American rights to the drug as well as global rights in Rett syndrome and Fragile X syndrome to Neuren’s development candidate NNZ-2591. In April of this year, Acadia launched trofinetide in the United States under the brand name DAYBUE as the first and only drug approved for the treatment of Rett syndrome.
“This expanded worldwide agreement solidifies Acadia’s position as the global leader in addressing the unmet needs of people with Rett syndrome,” said Steve Davis, Acadia’s President and Chief Executive Officer. “We have successfully delivered DAYBUE, the first FDA-approved therapy that treats the core symptoms of Rett syndrome, and are deeply committed to broadening access to this important therapy for patients worldwide.”
In addition to expanding access to trofinetide outside of North America, this agreement gives Acadia exclusive worldwide rights to NNZ-2591 in both Rett syndrome and Fragile X syndrome. NNZ-2591 is an investigational synthetic analogue of cyclo-glycyl-proline (cGP) which results from the breakdown of human insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1). NNZ-2591 is currently under development by Neuren in four other rare neurodevelopmental syndromes.
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Execution of this agreement advances Acadia’s corporate strategy to expand our rare disease business. This deal also enables Acadia to leverage insights from our successful U.S. launch of DAYBUE in other global territories. In addition, this expansion will further advance the global potential of Acadia’s current development portfolio.
Acadia intends to submit a New Drug Submission (NDS) for trofinetide in Canada in the next 18 months with plans for Europe, Asia and other regions to be announced at a later date.
Financial Terms
Under the terms of the expanded agreement, Neuren will receive an upfront payment of US $100 million and is eligible to receive additional potential downstream milestone and royalty payments earned separately for trofinetide and NNZ-2591.
Outside of North America, Neuren is eligible to receive additional payments for trofinetide upon the achievement of specified revenue milestones as follows:
Source: BioSpace