Galmed Pharmaceuticals announced that Aramchol, an SCD1 inhibitor, significantly attenuates and prevents biliary fibrosis in mouse models of primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC). Aramchol treatment leads to significant inhibition of TGFβ-induced hepatic fibrosis pathways and upregulates peroxisome proliferator activated receptor (PPAR) signaling. This provides a rationale for assessing Aramchol in further clinical studies in patients with fibrosis-driven liver cancers.
Galmed Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: GLMD) has announced significant results for Aramchol, their SCD1 inhibitor drug, in pre-clinical models of primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC). The study demonstrated that Aramchol both prevented and reduced biliary fibrosis in PSC mouse models, with a 2-fold significant inhibition (p0.05) of TGFβ-induced hepatic fibrosis pathways. The drug showed dose-dependent reduction in fibrotic markers and hepatic stellate cell-activating genes in human and mouse cells [1].
These findings are particularly significant given the connection between PSC and cholangiocarcinoma (CCA), the second-most prevalent liver malignancy. PSC carries a 20% lifetime risk of developing CCA, which has an exceptionally poor prognosis with most patients surviving less than a year. The relationship between fibrosis and cancer is well-established, with 80-90% of hepatocellular carcinomas developing in fibrotic or cirrhotic livers [1].
Aramchol has already demonstrated significant improvement in liver fibrosis in previous human studies (ARREST Phase IIb trial and ARMOR Phase III extension), with an established safety profile. This creates a clear translational path toward testing in fibrosis-driven liver cancers. The company plans to advance Aramchol towards Phase 2/3 clinical studies focusing on GI oncology indications [1].
The research holds substantial clinical relevance, and Galmed's pre-clinical findings on Aramchol represent a significant scientific advancement in understanding the drug's mechanism as an SCD1 inhibitor. The data shows Aramchol both attenuates and prevents biliary fibrosis in PSC mouse models with dose-dependent reductions in fibrotic markers and hepatic stellate cell-activating genes. The 2-fold inhibition (p0.05) of TGFβ-induced hepatic fibrosis pathways while upregulating PPAR signaling is particularly noteworthy [2].
This development potentially repositions Aramchol from primarily a NASH treatment toward broader applications in PSC and GI oncological indications like cholangiocarcinoma and hepatocellular carcinoma. The company's stated intention to transition to Phase 2/3 studies in GI oncology represents a significant strategic expansion of their clinical development program, addressing conditions with substantial unmet medical needs [1, 2].
References:
[1] https://www.stocktitan.net/news/GLMD/galmed-reports-significant-anti-fibrotic-effects-of-aramchol-in-psc-8ul7j1w0cx4x.html
[2] https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/galmed-reports-significant-anti-fibrotic-effects-of-aramchol-in-psc-models-302453710.html
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