Eric Shaff
Analyst · Oppenheimer
Thank you, Carlo, and good morning everyone. The last several months have been an eventful period for Seres. We have made substantial progress advancing our lead SER-109 program towards the BLA filing for recurrent C. difficile infection. We signed an important SER-109 co-commercialization agreement with Nestle Health Science covering the North American region. We obtained top line clinical results for our SER-287 program, and we have also continued to make clinical development progress with SER-155 and SER-301, our next generation rationally designed pipeline candidates. Last month we held two conference calls focused on our CDI and ulcerative colitis programs and today, we intend to keep our remarks relatively brief. I will begin today with SER-109. Our top corporate priorities are to complete the required SER-109 safety database through our ongoing open-label study and to prepare for a high quality BLA filing. We are very pleased with our progress with the enrollment of the open-label study and we are on track to achieve the full 300 patient targets later this quarter. Our organization is also preparing for a successful commercial launch. To support this effort in early July we entered into an agreement with Nestle Health Science to jointly commercialize SER-109 in the United States and Canada. We believe that through this agreement, Seres is well positioned to effectively bring SER-109 to patients suffering from recurrent CDI. The transaction also provides Seres with substantial capital to drive the continued development of our earlier stage pipeline of microbiome therapeutics, including SER-301 and SER-155, our preclinical stage programs, as well as our platform capabilities. Under the terms of the Nestle agreement, Seres received an upfront license payment of 175 million and is eligible for an additional 125 million upon FDA approval of SER-109 and 10 million upon approval in Canada. The agreement includes sales target milestones, which is achieved could total up to 225 million. Upon commercialization, Seres will be entitled to an amount equal to 50% of the commercial profits. We're very pleased with this transaction from both a strategic and financial perspective. As you may remember, Nestle previously owned ex-North American rights to SER-109 based on our 2016 deal. There are considerable efficiencies and benefits to a global approach to commercializing SER-109 in terms of marketing, pricing and reimbursement, executing an effective global regulatory strategy, and other aspects of launch that will maximize value. Seres has been - Nestle has been a great collaborator to Seres, and we look forward to continuing to work closely with them moving forward. We expect SER-109 to become the first ever FDA approved microbiome therapeutic. SER-109 approval and launch would represent a landmark event for the field and in addition, we believe that SER-109 represents a substantial commercial opportunity for Seres. Each recurrence of CDI has been estimated to result in approximately $34,000 in direct healthcare expenses. The recurrent CDI population includes approximately 170,000 cases in the U.S., and we believe we have the opportunity to address this entire patient group. Since announcing our positive SER-109 Phase 3 data last summer, we've observed a steady increase in the awareness and excitement of the medical community for this product. The substantial interest in SER-109 has also been seen in the enrollment of our ongoing open-label study, and in fact, July was our highest month of enrollment to date. The SER-109 open-label study is now approaching full enrollment, and we believe to achieve target enrollment late in the third quarter. The FDA has requested that six months of safety follow-up from this study to be included in the safety database. Completion of this database will support a SER-109 BLA filing and this would represent completing a major requirement to potentially enable SER-109 to become the first ever FDA approved microbiome therapeutics. In addition to SER-109, we are advancing the pipeline of additional investigational microbiome therapeutics. Last month, we reported top line clinical results from our SER-287 Phase 2 study. The SER-287 Phase 2 study did not demonstrate clinical benefit in patients with mild to moderate UC. The results of this study were unexpected, and we are now focused on obtaining microbiome results from that study. We expect these data to provide us with a much deeper understanding of the study outcome, and why the results were so different from the prior Phase 1b study data. In addition, these results will provide us with valuable information that will provide insights to inform continued development of our pipeline, including SER-301, our next generation investigational candidate for ulcerative colitis. As we have successfully done with our SER-109 program, in the coming months, we intend to perform an in-depth scientific analysis of all Phase 2b results, learn from the data, and determine what modifications to implement in our future microbiome therapeutic development efforts. I'll now pass the call to Matt to discuss our earlier stage pipeline programs.