Kevin Chung
Analyst · Maxim Group. Please go ahead
Thanks, Tim and thanks to our listeners for joining us today. I am pleased to report that our NEUTRALIZE-AKI trial has now crossed the halfway point towards our enrollment goal of 200 patients. We currently stand at 100 patients enrolled as of Tuesday. NEUTRALIZE-AKI, as many of you know, is our randomized controlled pivotal trial, designed to determine whether up to 10 sequential 24-hour treatments with SCD therapy will improve 90-day survival or recovery from kidney failure in patients with AKI requiring CRRT when compared to CRRT alone. Our goal is to enroll a total of 200 patients with a primary endpoint identified as the composite of mortality or dialysis dependency at 90 days. Us reaching the 100-patient milestone triggers an interim analysis that will be conducted by the DSMB. This analysis will commence once our 100th patient has reached the 90-day primary endpoint. With some additional time for data and review, we anticipate the DSMB will submit their recommendation to the company in the third quarter of 2025. To give you a sense of how the analysis will proceed, the pooled data will be analyzed based on the differences in outcomes between the treated patients versus controls. The DSMB will provide a recommendation to SeaStar Medical and the NEUTRALIZE-AKI investigators as to how to proceed with the trial. While we can't be certain of the recommendation from the independent DSMB, we designed the interim analysis to ensure we power the trial properly. As Eric indicated, we must preserve the integrity of the trial. To set expectations properly, we will only convey the summary decision of the DSMB and no other clinical results will be shared. The possible DSMB recommendations are as follows; continue the trial as planned to a total of 200, which is what we anticipate; increase the total sample size to ensure adequate power if the effect size appears to be smaller than anticipated; stop the trial for overwhelming efficacy; or lastly, stop the trial for futility. We expect a completely objective and unbiased recommendation by the DSMB based on what the interim data shows. Now, that we've reached the halfway point, we plan on redoubling our efforts towards getting to our goal of 200 as fast as humanly possible. As such, we plan to activate additional sites to ensure we are screening as many patients as needed. I have to emphasize that per trial design, we're focusing the enrollment of the right type of patient through a process called enrichment. There are certain groups of patients, for example, that have absolutely no modifiable disease. In other words, they would live or die regardless of the intervention based on their underlying problem. Countless pivotal studies in the past have failed, falling victim to having too many of these types of patients. This will not be us. While the enrollment rate for this trial has been agonizingly slow at times, like this past month, I want to assure all of you that our team is 100% focused on completing enrollment by the end of this year. Additionally, I am certain that we are enrolling the right type of patients into our trial and appropriately excluding those who have no modifiable disease whatsoever. I know we have optimized our chances of a positive trial. Now, looking beyond the interim analysis. Once we have completed the trial and achieved 100% data lock, we intend to rapidly analyze and report our data to the international medical community. Provided we meet our primary endpoint, we plan to complete our PMA filing and submit it to the FDA. The breakthrough device designation, which we hold for adult AKI, should help facilitate speedy communication between us and the FDA during the review and approval process. And as such, we would hope to have product available to patients sometime in the fourth quarter of 2026. The NEUTRALIZE-AKI trial is clearly our focus today. However, our strategic goal as a company is to widen the addressable market rapidly to target other critical unmet medical needs for the treatment of destructive hyperinflammation through additional clinical trials. Beyond the adult AKI indication, we have been awarded breakthrough device designation for five others, including the treatment of patients with cardiorenal syndrome, patients with hepatorenal syndrome, patients with end-stage renal disease, and both adult and pediatric patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Given the organ and disease-agnostic characteristic of our therapy, there are several more indications to come. We believe that AKI is just the beginning of our opportunity to spare organs and save lives in these patient populations. With that as a summary of our clinical developmental efforts and goals, I turn the call over to our CFO, David Green.