Palvella Completes Phase 2 Trial for QTORIN Rapamycin in Cutaneous Venous Malformations
PorAinvest
lunes, 15 de septiembre de 2025, 7:32 am ET1 min de lectura
PVLA--
QTORIN™ rapamycin is a novel 3.9% rapamycin anhydrous gel designed to treat VMs, which affect an estimated 75,000+ U.S. patients. The drug aims to inhibit mTOR signaling while minimizing systemic exposure. The single-arm, open-label study will evaluate safety, tolerability, and efficacy through multiple measures, with top-line results expected in mid-December 2025 [1].
Cutaneous VMs are a serious, rare genetic disease caused by mutations in genes that cause overactivation of the PI3K/mTOR signaling pathway, leading to dysfunctional veins within the skin. The Phase 2 TOIVA study is a single-arm, open-label, baseline-controlled clinical trial of QTORIN™ rapamycin, which aims to harness the potential therapeutic benefits of rapamycin, an mTOR inhibitor, while minimizing systemic exposure and potential adverse reactions associated with systemic therapy [1].
Palvella's successful enrollment of 16 subjects in their Phase 2 TOIVA trial represents a significant operational milestone for the company's lead candidate, QTORIN™ rapamycin. This achievement keeps the company on track with their clinical timeline, with top-line data expected by mid-December 2025 [1].
While enrollment completion is positive, investors should recognize that Phase 2 represents mid-stage development, with significant regulatory hurdles still ahead. The upcoming data readout in December 2025 will be the true value inflection point, determining whether QTORIN™ rapamycin demonstrates sufficient safety and efficacy to advance to Phase 3 [1].
Venous malformations are the most common type of vascular malformation, with skin involvement impacting an estimated approximately 50-80% of patients, which can result in bleeding, thrombosis, ulceration, disfigurement, and proliferation [1]. QTORIN™ rapamycin has the potential to be the first approved therapy in the U.S. for more than an estimated 75,000 U.S. patients with cutaneous VMs [1].
Palvella Therapeutics has completed enrollment in its Phase 2 TOIVA trial of QTORIN™ rapamycin for cutaneous venous malformations. The trial has successfully met its recruitment target of 16 subjects at leading vascular anomaly centers. Top-line data is expected in mid-December 2025. Cutaneous VMs are a rare genetic disease with no FDA-approved therapies, impacting an estimated 50-80% of patients with bleeding, thrombosis, ulceration, disfigurement, and proliferation. QTORIN™ rapamycin has the potential to be the first approved therapy in the U.S. for more than 75,000 U.S. patients with cutaneous VMs.
Palvella Therapeutics (NASDAQ: PVLA) has successfully completed enrollment in its Phase 2 TOIVA trial for QTORIN™ rapamycin, a potential first-in-class treatment for cutaneous venous malformations (VMs). The trial enrolled 16 subjects at leading vascular anomaly centers, meeting its target of approximately 15 participants [1].QTORIN™ rapamycin is a novel 3.9% rapamycin anhydrous gel designed to treat VMs, which affect an estimated 75,000+ U.S. patients. The drug aims to inhibit mTOR signaling while minimizing systemic exposure. The single-arm, open-label study will evaluate safety, tolerability, and efficacy through multiple measures, with top-line results expected in mid-December 2025 [1].
Cutaneous VMs are a serious, rare genetic disease caused by mutations in genes that cause overactivation of the PI3K/mTOR signaling pathway, leading to dysfunctional veins within the skin. The Phase 2 TOIVA study is a single-arm, open-label, baseline-controlled clinical trial of QTORIN™ rapamycin, which aims to harness the potential therapeutic benefits of rapamycin, an mTOR inhibitor, while minimizing systemic exposure and potential adverse reactions associated with systemic therapy [1].
Palvella's successful enrollment of 16 subjects in their Phase 2 TOIVA trial represents a significant operational milestone for the company's lead candidate, QTORIN™ rapamycin. This achievement keeps the company on track with their clinical timeline, with top-line data expected by mid-December 2025 [1].
While enrollment completion is positive, investors should recognize that Phase 2 represents mid-stage development, with significant regulatory hurdles still ahead. The upcoming data readout in December 2025 will be the true value inflection point, determining whether QTORIN™ rapamycin demonstrates sufficient safety and efficacy to advance to Phase 3 [1].
Venous malformations are the most common type of vascular malformation, with skin involvement impacting an estimated approximately 50-80% of patients, which can result in bleeding, thrombosis, ulceration, disfigurement, and proliferation [1]. QTORIN™ rapamycin has the potential to be the first approved therapy in the U.S. for more than an estimated 75,000 U.S. patients with cutaneous VMs [1].
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