Scynexis has reported positive data from the Phase III VANISH-306 clinical trial of its new oral therapy, Brexafemme (Ibrexafungerp) to treat vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC), a vaginal yeast infection caused due to Candida.
An antifungal licensed to treat VVC, Brexafemme works by hindering glucan synthase. It is fungicidal against Candida species and destroys fungal cells.
The international, multicentre, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial analysed the efficacy and safety of ibrexafungerp as against placebo in female subjects aged over 12 years with VVC.
Findings showed that ibrexafungerp demonstrated to be superior to placebo in the primary as well as all crucial secondary goals of the trial.
Nearly 63.3% of the subjects in the ibrexafungerp arm had substantially increased clinical cure rates as against 44% in the placebo arm, at the test-of-cure (TOC) day-ten visit.
Day-ten data also showed that ibrexafungerp outperformed placebo in terms of mycological eradication and clinical improvement.
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By GlobalDataIbrexafungerp was found to be safe and well-tolerated in the trial with side effects observed to be gastrointestinal in nature and of mild to moderate severity.
Furthermore, the oral antifungal provided lasting clinical effect at day 25 visit with 73.9% in the ibrexafungerp group attaining a complete sign and symptom resolution.
Scynexis chief medical officer David Angulo said: “Ibrexafungerp is a first-in-class, one-day oral therapy that blocks glucan synthase, an enzyme critical for the maintenance of the fungal cell wall, and has shown in vitro fungicidal activity against multiple different Candida species strains, including those that are echinocandin and azole-resistant.”
The US Food and Drug Administration’s approval for Brexafemme to treat VVC is based on data from two Phase III trials, VANISH-303 and VANISH-306, of the VANISH development programme.
In January this year, Mycovia reported positive topline data from the Phase III ultraVIOLET trial of oteseconazole (VT1161), to treat people with recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis (RVVC).