Unlike the competition, RemeGenix' lead drug in its pipeline is a
Modulator
of Beta secretase processing of APP (
MoBA)
and, as such, can reduce APP processing without having the potential for side effects that have been
seen when using various secretase inhibitors (see
here for an overview of the activities of
MoBA in comparison with the competitive products).
Thus,
MoBA provides the most specific protection, and therapeutic recovery from the negative biological processes that cause
cognitive dysfunction.
In early proof of concept animal studies, the company's scientific founder, Luciano D’Adamio, at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine,
demonstrated that the therapeutic approach (of which
MoBA is now the lead candidate) can act to alter the progression of the disease, possibly even
after manifestation of a memory deficit, and
MoBA has been shown to directly modulate APP processing.
Taken together, RemeGenix' lead drug candidates represent a novel disease altering
mechanism, and have the potential to treat both early (asymptomatic) and late stage (symptomatic) disease.
In discovery efforts, unsatisfied with existing animal models for dementia, Dr. D’Adamio created our Novel animal Models of Alzheimer's and
dementia (
NoMAD), and then used these models to advance our scientific understanding of the disease.
NoMAD was also used to establish proof of principle of
MoBA in direct comparison with several competitive drugs acting in the APP pathway.
NoMAD is now patent pending and licensed to RemeGenix,
and represents the first biological model of AD that faithfully replicates a human dementia.
We anticipate, as more and more people review
NoMAD, and as the industry's understanding of the biology of AD increases,
that they will realize the need for such a model in their own discovery efforts (see
here for an overview
of the type of discovery tools possible with
NoMAD).
The Company feels strongly, and has openly stated, that many of the competitive products in development have failed clinical trials
because they were designed and tested on animal models that are not biologically relevant, meaning that they do not
genetically match any possible form of human dementia, and thus the results achieved with models other than NoMAD are
almost guaranteed to fail once translated into human studies.