Berlin-based start-up AudioCure Pharma has enrolled more than 50% of the planned patients in its ongoing Phase 2 clinical trial. The aim of the study is to test the efficacy of the new compound AC102 for the treatment of sudden hearing loss. As sudden hearing loss is usually treated with non-specific corticoids that are not approved for this indication or for which there is no clear evidence of efficacy, there is an urgent need for new therapies.
“Our goal is to achieve a paradigm shift in the treatment of sudden hearing loss with the specific effect of AC102 and to contribute to better help sudden hearing loss patients in the future”
This enrollment milestone is an important step in the development of AC102 and in addressing the unmet medical need for sudden hearing loss. The safety and tolerability of AC102 has already been successfully tested in healthy volunteers. “Recruitment for the trial is challenging because the compound can only be effective in the first few days after the onset of the sudden hearing loss and we can therefore only enroll patients in the study during this short window. I am therefore very pleased with this recruitment success, which underscores the high level of interest in new, more effective treatment options for patients with sudden hearing loss,” explains the coordinating investigator, Prof. Dr. Stefan Plontke of Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg.
AC102 is considered a promising alternative to corticoid therapy for sudden hearing loss, as it was able to restore hearing almost completely in an acoustic trauma model after a single application in a preclinical study1 This work also revealed the mechanism of action of AC102. Unlike the non-specific, anti-inflammatory effects of corticoids, AC102 specifically targets the sensory cells and synaptic connections in the inner ear that are responsible for hearing loss. “Our goal is to achieve a paradigm shift in the treatment of sudden hearing loss with the specific effect of AC102 and to contribute to better help sudden hearing loss patients in the future,” said Dr. Reimar Schlingensiepen, CEO of AudioCure Pharma.
The Phase 2 trial is expected to continue enrolling patients until end of 2025.