Ovid Therapeutics Inc. (NASDAQ: OVID), a biopharmaceutical company
dedicated to improving the lives of people affected by rare
epilepsies and brain conditions, announced it has significantly
expanded its SAB with the appointment of renowned neurologists,
neuroscientists, and epileptologists. The new SAB members were
appointed to advise Ovid on the potential application of its unique
pipeline programs and mechanisms of action to broader areas of
neurology in which they may offer therapeutic promise.
Specifically, advancements over the last year in Ovid’s Rho
associated coiled-coil containing protein kinase 2 (ROCK2)
inhibitor and potassium chloride co-transporter 2 (KCC2) direct
activator libraries suggest that these mechanisms may have a
fundamental role in modifying intractable disorders of the brain,
including conditions caused by hyperexcitability, neurovascular
dysfunction and neuroinflammation.
The SAB is chaired by Professor Robert Langer,
who convened the first meeting of the expanded SAB at Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT) in July 2024. Initial areas of focus
for the SAB are the translation and clinical development strategies
associated with the ROCK2 inhibition and KCC2 direct activator
portfolio, which contain multiple compounds and formulation
opportunities.
“I challenge every team and company that I
support to answer big questions that will help patients.
Neuroscience is a particularly challenging area in scale and
complexity; I believe that Ovid is positioned to help answer major
questions about intractable conditions of the brain,” said Dr.
Langer, Sc.D. and Chair of the SAB. “The Company’s small molecule
pipeline has multiple potential jewels that interdict novel targets
involved in the pathophysiology of multiple disorders. In
particular, the ROCK2 inhibition and KCC2 direct activator
mechanisms hold the potential to treat, and potentially halt the
progression of, multiple conditions. I look forward to working with
the team and my experienced co-advisors in this pivotal time for
Ovid.”
“Working with Professor Langer, we have brought
together an intellectual powerhouse of renowned clinicians and
translational scientists to tackle big questions and open up new
potential therapeutic avenues for patients with intractable brain
disorders. We are grateful to Bob for his leadership in
convening the significant group together with our management as we
progress deeper into the clinic,” said Dr. Zhong Zhong, Ph.D.,
Chief Scientific Officer of Ovid Therapeutics. “Together we will
explore the actionable clinical applications of our molecules on
KCC2 activation, GABA aminotransferase inhibition and ROCK2
inhibition. Our team is already benefiting from the exciting
interactions with Professor Langer, Dr. Najm, Dr. Sankar, Dr.
Maguire and Dr. Noebels as we advance our programs.”
Ovid anticipates moving its pipeline forward
with multiple milestones expected in the second half of 2024,
including: initiation of a Phase 2 proof of concept study of
OV888/GV101 capsule, a highly selective and blood-brain barrier
penetrant ROCK2 inhibitor; Phase 1 SAD and MAD data readout from
OV329, a next-generation GABA-aminotransferase inhibitor; and IND
submission for OV350, the first of multiple programs in the KCC2
library.
Working together with the SAB, Ovid looks to
optimize its research, translation and clinical development
plans.
Members of the Ovid Therapeutics Scientific Advisory
Board
Robert Langer, Ph.D.,
ChairRobert Langer is the chair of Ovid’s Scientific and
Clinical Advisory Board. Dr. Langer is one of 10 Institute
Professors at MIT and has written over 1,500 scholarly articles. He
is also the most cited engineer in history (h-index 286, with over
338,000 citations according to Google Scholar). He has served as
the chair of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Science Board,
and has been recognized with over 220 awards, including the United
States National Medals of both Science and Technology and
Innovation. Dr. Langer was named as one of the 20 most important
people in biotechnology by Discover magazine and one of 15
innovators who will reinvent our future by Forbes. TIME and CNN
named him as one of the most important people in America and one of
the 18 top people in science or medicine in America. He was also
recognized as one of the world’s 25 most important individuals in
biotechnology by Forbes and by BioWorld. Dr. Langer holds 35
honorary doctorate degrees and has been elected to the National
Academies of Medicine, Engineering, Sciences and Inventors.
Imad Najm, M.D.Imad Najm, M.D.,
is the Vice Chair for Strategy and Development at the Cleveland
Clinic Neurological Institute and Director of the Cleveland Clinic
Epilepsy Center (2006-present). He is an Adjunct Professor in the
Department of Biomedical Engineering at Case Western Reserve
University and the Department of Neurobiology at Kent State
University. Dr. Najm also has served as the Co-Director of Basic
Sciences and Neurosciences at Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of
Medicine at Case Western Reserve University, Head of Adult Epilepsy
and Director of the Epilepsy and Clinical Neurophysiology
fellowship at Cleveland Clinic. His research over the last 34 years
has been funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the
U.S. Department of Defense, the Epilepsy Foundation, and multiple
philanthropic donations. He has published 275 peer-reviewed papers
in multiple journals, authored or co-authored many book chapters
and edited two textbooks. He has lectured on epilepsy in more than
30 countries and organized international symposia, courses and
workshops in more than 15 countries. His main areas of research
interest include the mechanisms of disease
(epileptogenicity/epileptogenesis), clinical and imaging
correlates, and surgical management of focal cortical dysplasia. He
has been teaching Basic Neurosciences at Cleveland Clinic Lerner
College of Medicine since 2005. He has mentored and co-mentored
more than 300 epilepsy fellows and graduate students. Dr. Najm
designed and co-directed the Neuroscience Curriculum at Cleveland
Clinic Lerner College of Medicine at Case Western Reserve
University. Dr. Najm received his M.D. from Saint Joseph University
in Beirut, Lebanon. He had post-graduate training in neurobiology
at the University of Southern California and the University of
California, Irvine. He also did post-graduate training in
neurology, epilepsy, and clinical neurophysiology at Cleveland
Clinic.
Raman Sankar, M.D., Ph.D.Raman
Sankar, M.D., Ph.D., is the Emeritus Chief of Pediatric Neurology
at UCLA Health. He is an elected Fellow of the American Academy of
Neurology and the American Epilepsy Society, and a member of the
American Pediatric Society, the Child Neurology Society and the
Society for Neuroscience. He has served on several editorial boards
of journals dedicated to epilepsy research and has also served on
several NINDS-NIH review committees. He is a recipient of the
Founders Award of the American Epilepsy Society, the highest honor
conferred by the Society in recognition of outstanding lifetime
achievement in the field of epilepsy. Board certified in neurology
with special qualification in child neurology, he has dedicated
over three decades to advancing research and clinical practices in
epilepsy and child neurology. Dr. Sankar holds an M.D. from Tulane
University and a Ph.D. in medicinal chemistry from the University
of Washington.
Jamie Maguire, Ph.D.Jamie
Maguire, Ph.D., is Professor of Neuroscience at Tufts University
School of Medicine and was named the Kenneth and JoAnn G. Wellner
Professor in Neuroscience in 2019. Dr. Maguire is a member of the
Graduate Biomedical Sciences Pharmacology and Neuroscience
programs. She is the Director of the Building Diversity in
Biomedical Sciences (BDBS) program and has a strong commitment to
increasing diversity, equity, and inclusion in STEM and beyond. Her
current research focuses on a systems physiology approach to the
study of neurological and neuropsychiatric diseases, focusing on
epilepsy and mood disorders, which has led to successful clinical
trials for postpartum depression treatments. She received a BS in
neuroscience and BA in the history of art and architecture from the
University of Pittsburgh and her Ph.D. in neuroscience from George
Washington University. Dr. Maguire trained as a postdoctoral fellow
at UCLA investigating the ability of steroid hormones and
neurosteroids to modulate GABAergic inhibition and their impact on
mood disorders and epilepsy.
Jeffrey Noebels, M.D.,
Ph.D.Jeffrey Noebels, M.D., Ph.D., is the Cullen Trust for
Health Care Endowed Chair in Neurogenetics, and Professor of
Neurology, Neuroscience, and Molecular and Human Genetics at Baylor
College of Medicine, where he directs the Blue Bird Circle
Developmental Neurogenetics Laboratory. Dr Noebels is a past
president of the American Epilepsy Society and fellow of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science. Dr. Noebels’
research involves understanding how single genes regulate neuronal
excitability and network synchronization within the central nervous
system. His lab's recent work on mouse models of Alzheimer’s
Disease and glioblastoma-related epilepsy has provided pioneering
insights into the role of hyperexcitability in cognitive decline
and tumorigenesis. He received a BA from Reed College, an M.D. from
Yale University School of Medicine, and his Ph.D. from Stanford
University. Dr. Noebels conducted his neurology residency at
Massachusetts General Hospital, and a post-doctoral fellowship at
Harvard University. Board certified in neurology by the American
Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, his research interests include
gene control of neuronal excitability within the developing central
nervous system, inherited neurological diseases, and epilepsy.
About Ovid TherapeuticsOvid
Therapeutics Inc. is a New York-based biopharmaceutical company
that is dedicated to improving the lives of people affected by
certain epilepsies and brain conditions with seizure symptoms. The
Company is advancing a pipeline of novel, targeted small molecule
candidates that modulate the intrinsic and extrinsic factors
involved in neuronal hyperexcitability causative of seizures and
other neurological symptoms. Ovid is developing: OV888/GV101
capsule, a potent and highly selective ROCK2 inhibitor capsule, for
the potential treatment of cerebral cavernous malformations and
other rare central nervous system diseases; OV329, a
GABA-aminotransferase inhibitor, a potential therapy for
treatment-resistant seizures; and OV350, a direct activator of the
KCC2 transporter, for the potential treatment of epilepsies and
other psychiatric conditions. For more information about these and
other Ovid research programs, please visit www.ovidrx.com.
Forward-Looking Statements
This press release includes certain disclosures
by Ovid that contain “forward-looking statements,” including,
without limitation: statements regarding the potential success of
Ovid’s SAB; the potential application of Ovid’s pipeline programs
and mechanisms of action to broader areas of neurology; the
potential opportunity OV888/GV101 capsule; the timing of initiation
and data readouts of Ovid’s Phase 2 clinical program studying
OV888/GV101 capsule; and Ovid’s potential future business
development opportunities and statements regarding the potential
use and development of OV888/GV101 capsule, OV329, and OV350 and
compounds from Ovid’s library of direct activators of KCC2. You can
identify forward-looking statements because they contain words such
as “advances,” “anticipates,” “could,” “expects,” “may,” “plans,”
“potential,” “promise,” “progress,” and “will,” and similar
expressions (as well as other words or expressions referencing
future events, conditions or circumstances). Forward-looking
statements are based on Ovid’s current expectations and
assumptions. Because forward-looking statements relate to the
future, they are subject to inherent uncertainties, risks and
changes in circumstances that may differ materially from those
contemplated by the forward-looking statements, which are neither
statements of historical fact nor guarantees or assurances of
future performance. Important factors that could cause actual
results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking
statements include, without limitation, uncertainties inherent in
the preclinical and clinical development and regulatory approval
processes, risks related to Ovid’s ability to achieve its financial
objectives, the risk that Ovid may not be able to realize the
intended benefits of its technology or its business strategy, or
risks related to Ovid’s ability to identify business development
targets or strategic partners, to enter into strategic transactions
on favorable terms, or to consummate and realize the benefits of
any business development transactions. Additional risks that could
cause actual results to differ materially from those in the
forward-looking statements are set forth under the caption “Risk
Factors” in Ovid’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) on May 14, 2024, and in
future filings Ovid makes with the SEC. Any forward-looking
statements contained in this press release speak only as of the
date hereof, and Ovid assumes no obligation to update any
forward-looking statements contained herein, whether because of any
new information, future events, changed circumstances or otherwise,
except as otherwise required by law.
Contacts
Investors: Garret Bonney IR@ovidrx.com
617-735-6093
OR
Media: Raquel
Caborcabo@ovidrx.com646-647-6553
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