Talat Imran
Analyst · Bank of America. Your line is open. Please. Go ahead
Thank you, Laurence. Good afternoon, everyone and thank you all for joining our fourth quarter and full year 2021 financial results conference call. 2021 proved to be a transformative period for Rani Therapeutics. During the year, the company completed an initial public offering on NASDAQ, expanded its executive leadership, progressed its development pipeline and made further progress optimizing the RaniPill oral delivery platform. Before I turn to recent events, I would like to start today's call by going over the key milestones we achieved in 2021. Our most notable achievement was the completion of the successful IPO in August, which raised approximately $84 million in gross proceeds. As a result, Rani exited the year in a strong financial position. On a personal note, I was honored to be appointed CEO prior to us going public and to lead Rani Therapeutics through the IPO process. In 2021 Rani's executive team was further altered by the appointment of Eric Groen to General Counsel. We also expanded our non-executive team, welcoming Lyn Baranowski, Laureen DeBuono, and Jean-Luc Butel to our Board of Directors with Lisa Rometty, joining our Board in January. Turning to our operations, we have made significant progress in refining and furthering our drug development plans over the past year. Following our positive Phase I study results for Octreotide using our original RaniPill capsule, which were announced in 2020, and which serve as a proof of concept for our injectable to oral delivery platform, we further refined not only the platform itself, but also our near term clinical development plans for the oral delivery of biologics. As a reminder, the original RaniPill capsule can deliver doses of up to three milligrams of drug per pill. This capacity enables us to pursue a whole host of disease indications, including neuroendocrine tumors or NETs, acromegaly, psoriatic arthritis, growth hormone deficiency, osteoporosis and hypoparathyroidism. Parathyroid hormone or PTH is administered by a daily injections for the treatment of osteoporosis and quickly became a key focus for us and led to the development of our drug candidate RT-102. As such in November, we completed a GLP 7-day repeat dose oral administration study that evaluated the safety and tolerability of RT-102 in a canine model. The study demonstrated successful delivery of a PTH payload via the RaniPill capsule with a pharmacokinetic profile comparable to the published data for once daily PTH, subcutaneous injection. I'm happy to announce that our second clinical program began last week with the initiation of our Phase I study of RT-102 for osteoporosis. The initiation of this study represents a significant milestone for Rani as our second program to enter the clinic. We intend to initiate another Phase I study with RT-109, our oral human growth hormone program in the second half of the year. Now let me turn to our other major development initiative, the RaniPill HC, a newly designed high capacity oral biologic delivery device capable of administering 500% plus higher payloads than our current RaniPill capsule. We believe this is a significant breakthrough in drug delivery with the potential to provide expansive opportunities for the company, such that we could potentially pursue a daily dosing option for over 50 additional biologics for internal development or through partnership. Importantly, we believe this development will not detract from us making progress with our original RaniPill capsule, which forms the core of our current development pipeline. The current RaniPill capsule is optimized for drugs with a daily dose of up to three milligrams. The RaniPill HC can potentially deliver up to 20 mgs. To give you an idea, some of the potential drugs that we could now target with the RaniPill HC include pembrolizumab, intercept, etanercept, trastuzumab, and secukinumab. From these alone, you should be able to tell the potential market opportunity for us with this higher capacity device is significant. As we reported in February of this year, in a preclinical in-vivo study, we successfully delivered an 80 milligram dose of drug in three canine test subjects using the RaniPill HC device placed by a laparotomy in the [indiscernible]. Systemic serum drug concentration was detected and measured over five days. Lastly, before I turn the call over to Mir to cover our preclinical data in more detail, I want to discuss the market research that we released on patient preference for ingesting an oral therapeutic over receiving an injection. We commissioned an independent third party survey to investigate US patient and physician preference for oral medications versus injections. The survey involves 611 patients aged 18 years or older, and presently using an injectable biologic to treat a condition and 201 physicians, mostly endocrinologists and rheumatologists, presently prescribing injectable biologics to their patients. Across all patient groups, genders, ages, conditions treated and severity of condition, there was a consistently strong preference for switching from injection to pills, even for infrequent injection regimens of up to six months. For example, for Prolia, which is administered as a subcutaneous injection, once every six months, 76% of patients surveyed indicated a preference for a daily pill versus a current regimen. For Humira, which is dosed by biweekly, the percentage of patients who prefer daily pills was 88%. All groups surveyed indicated a preference for oral over injectable drugs at or exceeding 64%. This demonstrates that there is a tremendous latent demand among patients for an oral alternative to many blockbuster biologic drugs. Together with the RaniPill HC, this presents a number of potential opportunities for expansion of Rani's pipeline in the future. In addition to the commission surveys, we conducted our own preference and tolerability study involving a mock RaniPill capsule containing potato starch to evaluate the ease with which a RaniPill capsule could be swallowed. Of the 150 individuals that participated, all were able to swallow the mock RaniPill capsule with no reported difficulty. Remember the RaniPill is a OOO sized pill similar in size to that of official old pill. Once again, we found that people overwhelmingly favor taking a pill in place of an injection. Thus, the market research confirmed what we believe to be true. People hate needles and patients prefer pills. With that, let me now turn the call over to Mir Hashim to discuss our preclinical and clinical updates in more detail.