Gene Kinney
Analyst · Cantor Fitzgerald. Your line is open
Thank you, Jen, and thank you all for joining us to review our 2021 financial results and business highlights. 2021 was a productive year for Prothena, marked by meaningful progress in our R&D portfolio, which represents the culmination of multiyear efforts. We're hopeful that these efforts will soon lead to impactful treatments for the millions of patients and families that are affected by diseases caused by misfolded protein. In 2021, we also continued to attract and retain highly talented professionals with excellent track records to support our transition towards becoming a fully integrated biotechnology company. Additionally, we ended the year with a strong cash position, which included $200 million in partner payments from our collaborations with leading pharmaceutical organization including Bristol Myers Squibb, Novo Nordisk and Roche. These collaborations are part of an intentional mix of wholly-owned and partnered assets, which allows us to have a broad pipeline with blockbuster potential further supporting our growth as a company. Prothena is driven by our mission to make a real impact for the patients and families we serve. That mission is enabled by our deep scientific expertise in protein dysregulation, which serves as a unifying thread between our business strategy, our portfolio development and the dedication that propels our team every day. We believe that our focus on slowing, stopping and treating neurodegenerative and rare peripheral amyloid diseases addresses significant unmet medical needs where our biology directed engine, our clinical expertise and our market positioning will enable us to advance best-in-class therapies that have the potential to transform the lives of patients. Our focus on neurodegenerative diseases include Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, which sadly are growing exponentially. Combined these two diseases affect an estimated 60 million people globally today. The significant burden is not only experienced by patients but also by caregivers and the overall health care system. In rare peripheral amyloid diseases, birtamimab and PRX004 are being developed in targeted patient populations at high risk for early mortality, which underscores our strategy to develop therapies for patients with an urgent need for improved survival. Since our inception, our core guiding principle has been to follow the science empirically and without bias. This rigorous approach to the advancement of medicine allows us to discover underlying pathophysiological processes and design molecules that optimally target pathogenic proteins and consequently have the greatest probability to slow or prevent disease. Over the years, we have refined our approach to include what we believe is an unparalleled knowledge of disease pathology and expertise, in empirical epitope mapping, advancing only those molecules that show a robust and consistent biological effect in the reduction of disease. Using our unique biology-directed engine, which leverages our deep know-how, today we've been able to advance three programs into mid to late clinical stages and six discovery candidates toward the clinic, with five potential new INDs projected by 2026. Prothena's understanding of Protein Dysregulation is based on many decades of scientific discoveries in the field. Much of our team including Wagner, our Chief Scientific Officer who's on the call today, have contributed key scientific and clinical discoveries in our field and have built a scientific heritage within Prothena that allows for an informed approach for the development of potentially best-in-class therapeutic candidate. Last year, we continued to add to this deep scientific heritage, with the addition of key personnel such as Hideki, our Chief Medical Officer, who is also present on our call today. Before we dive into the progress we made this year, I wanted to take a moment to highlight the breakthroughs that we as a field have made in advancing treatments for Alzheimer's disease. 2021 was a milestone year for the Alzheimer's community. Notable developments included the FDA accelerated approval, of the first disease-modifying therapy, significant advancements in clinical study design including optimized patient selection strategies, advancements in the use of biomarkers including blood-based biomarkers, an increased prominence of iADRS as a clinical outcome measure and a growing amount of evidence generated across multiple clinical data sets confirming the benefit of anti-beta therapies that interact with the immunoterminus of that target. This progress stands on the shoulders of many great scientists including Prothena's late co-founder Dr. Dale Schenk and multiple Prothena scientists, who carefully observe and follow the iterative scientific and clinical trial design learnings, to bring forth this new class of therapy to patients with Alzheimer's disease. At Prothena, we have celebrated these advancements but also believe that further improvement is needed. This is why we are advancing, what we believe is one of the most comprehensive therapeutic strategies to treat Alzheimer's disease. We have developed three product candidates, targeting key pathological pathways of the disease cascade, which expands from next-generation potentially disease-modifying treatment to potential combination and prevention strategies. Our portfolio takes advantage of the scientific and clinical trial design advances, and positions Prothena as a leader in the transformation of Alzheimer's therapeutic approaches. With that, let me now focus on highlighting some of the progress made across the portfolio in 2021. I'll start with PRX012, a potential best-in-class, patient-friendly, subcutaneous delivery treatment for Alzheimer's disease targeting a key epitope of the immunoterminus of amyloid beta with high binding potency. To date, preclinical data have shown that PRX012 binds to amyloid plaques, with high avidity, consistent with the potential for more effective Abeta plaque clearance at substantially lower doses than approved anti-Abeta therapy. New preclinical data presented at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference or AAIC this past summer, demonstrated that PRX012 significantly cleared both pyroglutamate modified and unmodified Abeta plaque in brain tissue at concentrations that are expected to be reached in the CNS with subcutaneous administration, on a convenient treatment schedule. We believe that PRX012, has the potential to transform the field of Alzheimer's disease. Our goal with PRX012 is to offer greater patient accessibility and compliance relative to the approved therapy and other immunoterminus-targeted treatments currently under development. Compared to first-generation treatment, subcutaneous PRX012 is also expected to result in smaller fluctuations in brain antibody concentration. This feature may allow us to differentiate on both efficacy and safety endpoints. Because of its high binding potency and suitability for subcutaneous administration, PRX012 has the potential to serve as a foundational anti-Abeta treatment for patients with Alzheimer's disease. We intend to fully leverage the learnings from upcoming clinical regulatory and commercial milestone from other first-generation anti-Abeta therapies to maximize the probability of success for our PRX012 program. In 2021, we also brought our tau-targeting monoclonal antibody PRX005 into the clinic. PRX005 is designed to be a best-in-class anti-tau antibody, by specifically targeting an episode within the microtubule binding region or MTBR. Tau tangles along with amyloid beta plaques, are pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease. And research indicates that tau pathology is related to the clinical and cognitive decline associated with disease. By leveraging our unbiased biology-directed engine, we found that targeting specific regions within the MTBR resulted in more consistent and robust reduction in the pathogenic uptake of tau into neurons and the downstream neurotoxic effects. At the 15th International Conference on Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Diseases, or AD/PD, in March of last year, we presented new preclinical data, showcasing PRX005's ability to reduce tau pathology and downstream behavioral deficits in multiple in vitro and preclinical in vivo models. PRX005 is one of the three programs being developed in partnership with our colleagues at Bristol-Myers Squibb and for which we received an $80 million option payment in 2021. We also advanced a third Alzheimer's program, our dual Abeta tau vaccine from discovery to preclinical development in 2021. For the first time we presented data at AAIC on our dual Abeta tau active vaccine. This vaccine is a multi-epitope single-agent vaccine designed to target the two key pathologies associated with Alzheimer's disease, amyloid beta and tau. Our data showed that vaccination of mice, guinea pigs and non-human primates generated a robust and balanced immune response to the intended epitopes on amyloid beta and tau without a cytotoxic T cell response to these endogenous proteins. Importantly, the result in antibody response to these vaccines have the appropriate impact in functional studies, promoting both phagocytosis of Abeta plaque and blockade of tau transmission in vitro. Our vaccine offers the exciting possibility to combine amyloid beta and tau targeting into a single construct, potentially aligning with the prevention strategy. Turning to prasinezumab, in Parkinson's disease, Roche our partner for prasinezumab presented data at AD/PD in March of last year. New analyses from Part 1 of the Phase 2 PASADENA study highlighted prasinezumab's greater effect of slowing clinical decline in subgroups of patients that exhibited more rapid disease progression. These data, when combined with previously discussed data sets from the study, further adds to the idea that selective targeting of alpha-synuclein at a key region within the C terminus may provide a disease-modifying impact in patients with early Parkinson's disease. In May of last year, the first patient was dosed in the Phase 2b PADOVA study, for which we received a $60 million milestone payment. And the study is currently being conducted by Roche. In addition to our progress in neurodegeneration, we also made significant advancements in our rare peripheral amyloid disease portfolio. 2021 was an important year for our birtamimab program. In February last year, we announced that we had reached an agreement with the FDA under a special protocol assessment, or SPA agreement, which allowed for the initiation of our confirmatory Phase 3 AFFIRM-AL study, where the prespecified alpha for study success was defined as 0.1. The SPA agreement followed for multiple discussions with the FDA Division of Cardiology and Nephrology and AL amyloidosis expert physicians on the overall safety of birtamimab and previously observed survival benefit in patients with Mayo Stage IV AL amyloidosis in the VITAL study. We initiated our global registrational AFFIRM-AL study last year and are currently enrolling patients. Current treatments for AL amyloidosis targets a clonal plasma cell that overproduce light chain. While these therapies can reduce new protein production, they fail to directly address the amyloid that has already deposited and is causing organ toxicity. Birtamimab is differentiated, as it's believed to remove the amyloid most proximally associated with organ dysfunction. We have extensively published on birtamimab's well-defined epitope and depleter mechanism of action, which we believe, provides for broad recognition of different types of light chain proteins that may be present in the organs of patients with this disease. Moving now from AL amyloidosis to ATTR amyloidosis. Following the completion of our Phase 1 study of -- [Audio Gap] for cardiovascular diseases to advance this promising treatment to patients on an expedited timeline. As part of this agreement Prothena is eligible to receive development and sales milestone payments of up to $1.23 billion which included a $60 million upfront payment received last year. Current treatment approaches are focused on the reduction of new transthyretin production or the stabilization of the normal homotetrameric form of this protein. PRX004 is a differentiated approach with a depleter mechanism of action that is designed to target and remove the resident protein. Moreover, PRX004 targets a key region of transthyretin that is not available in the normal homotetrameric structure and as such, uniquely interacts with only nonfunctional forms of this protein. In addition to our portfolio accomplishments, we've also made significant organizational progress this last year, as we continue to build an industry-leading fully integrated company. We strengthened our management team and Board of Directors to best position Prothena for long-term growth and success. Starting with our Board of Directors, in May, we appointed to our Board, Dr. Sanjiv Patel, CEO of Relay Therapeutics and an established leader with significant industry experience. In April, we appointed Dr. Hideki Garren, as our Chief Medical Officer. Hideki has extensive expertise and a successful track record of advancing neurological and rare disease programs from late-phase development registration and launch. In October, our CFO, Tran Nguyen was appointed to the additional and newly created role of Chief Strategy Officer and Brandon Smith was promoted from Chief Business Officer to Chief Operating Officer. These expanded roles support our continued transition to a fully integrated biotechnology company focused on neurodegenerative and rare peripheral amyloid diseases. This is an exciting time for Prothena. We are encouraged by the significant progress we have made over the past year. And we are looking towards our future. At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to Tran, for a discussion of our 2021 financial performance and our 2022 financial guidance. Tran?