Vipin Garg
Analyst · Guggenheim Partners. Please proceed with your question
Thank you, Stacey, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us today for a discussion of our first quarter 2021 financial results and business update. We’re trying a new format for our call this quarter and have a slide presentation accompanying our remarks. As Scot Roberts will review momentarily, we have impressive new preclinical data for our AdCOVID vaccine candidate that we want to take you through and the slides will be helpful visual aids. Our development efforts over the past year have set the stage for 2021 to be a data-rich period for our company, and we now have multiple investigational candidates advancing in the clinic. For today’s call, we want to focus on two of our most promising product candidates, AdCOVID and ALT-801. We anticipate reporting top-line data from each of these programs next month, with data from the Phase 1 AdCOVID program likely to read out first. As pioneers in intranasal vaccine development, we are especially proud of our achievements as they relate to our AdCOVID program. As an intranasal vaccine candidate, AdCOVID features unique attributes that are not available with currently authorized intramuscular vaccines. And therefore, we strongly believe that if authorized or approved, AdCOVID could become an important tool for the global COVID-19 vaccination effort. With the global pandemic continuing, there is widespread and growing awareness and interest in alternative vaccine approaches, for good reason. Although currently authorized vaccines have demonstrated excellent efficacy, there continues to be a considerable worldwide disparity in vaccine availability and increasing hesitancy around first-generation options. One of the key attributes I want to emphasize for AdCOVID is the potential for excellent tolerability, which is critical for maintaining a high degree of vaccine uptake. Based on experience with our influenza vaccine candidate, NasoVAX, we believe AdCOVID will be extremely well tolerated and easier to administer, potentially even self-administer. In fact, clinical and pre-clinical studies with our platform vaccine technology have shown a tolerability profile virtually indistinguishable from placebo. So we are very encouraged about this attribute of our vaccine candidate. As a single-dose needle-free vaccine, that is expected to be well tolerated and thermostable. We believe AdCOVID has the potential to address many of the current shortcomings of the COVID-19 vaccination effort and offer an important option for use in special populations such as pediatric and maternal immunization campaigns. Pending authorization, we anticipate AdCOVID finding wide acceptance as a booster for revaccination, including for coverage against variants of concerns and as a primary vaccine in the pediatric population in developing countries based on its ease of intranasal administration and its expected stability profile. Accordingly, we are excited and cautiously optimistic about our upcoming Phase 1 data readout, which we expect to announce in June. If the results of this trial are positive, we plan to quickly transition into a global Phase 2 clinical development program, which Scott Harris will review in more detail momentarily. We are planning for success, and in parallel with the development of our Phase 2 program, we have taken steps to ensure our manufacturing readiness. During the quarter, we announced the expansion of our agreement with our Lonza to include the construction of a dedicated manufacturing suite for AdCOVID, which will be capable of supplying product for late-stage clinical trials and potential future commercial supply. Manufacturing constraints have been a significant hindrance in global COVID-19 vaccine production efforts, and we want to help ensure our ability to supply AdCOVID on a commercial scale if authorized for use. We are operating in an exceptionally dynamic environment, as each new victory or setback in the COVID-19 vaccine space recast the landscape. Consequently, we’ll have to be adaptable and prepare to alter our course as events and developments dictate. In this context, we anticipated growing challenges in recruiting subjects to a placebo-controlled study as the authorized vaccines have become more widely available. Therefore, we amended our AdCOVID Phase 1 clinical trial protocol to reduce the number of subjects in this study to approximately 80 adults. I am pleased to report that we have now met the target enrollment in our amended Phase 1 AdCOVID clinical trial and are on track to announce top-line data in June. It’s important to note that the size of our amended study is comparable to the numbers of participants in Phase 1 studies of the U.S. authorized vaccine and is more than sufficient to demonstrate the anticipated robust tolerability and immunogenicity of the vaccine. Should the data support moving forward, we anticipate commencing our proposed Phase 2 development program quickly thereafter. Despite the availability of currently authorized vaccines, there is still a significant need and opportunity for a differentiated vaccine candidate like AdCOVID that may offer unique attributes. From a public health perspective, the potential to block transmission is important. And for the individual, the nasal route of administration and anticipated tolerability of AdCOVID may also be very meaningful. Feedback from our key opinion leaders and the public suggests that the appeal of an intranasal vaccine remains strong, and we are optimistic about the future potential of our AdCOVID vaccine candidate to make a difference in the global vaccination effort. Before Scott Harris provides an update on the clinical program, I would like to turn the presentation over to our Chief Scientific Officer, Scot Roberts, to take you through some of the exciting new pre-clinical data that we have recently generated in collaboration with our partners at UAB. The SARS-CoV-2 challenge model that we will be discussing is considered one of the best animal models for COVID-19 research, and we are particularly encouraged by the new data in this robust model. Scot, please go ahead.