AC Immune Initiates Final Cohort in Ongoing Phase 1b/2 ABATE Trial of Anti-Abeta Active Immunotherapy to Treat Alzheimer's Disease
AC Immune Initiates Final Cohort in Ongoing Phase 1b/2 ABATE Trial of Anti-Abeta Active Immunotherapy to
- Treatment of first patient in Cohort AD4 in ABATE trial triggers
$12 million milestone payment - Allows evaluation of potential for precision prevention of neurodegenerative diseases
- Data from ABATE Cohorts AD1, AD2 and AD3 after 12 months treatment expected Q2 2026
Lausanne,
ABATE is assessing ACI-24 in subjects with prodromal AD and in adults with Down syndrome (DS). AD4 includes subjects with prodromal AD.
Dr.
ACI-24 is an anti-Abeta active immunotherapy candidate designed to induce a robust antibody response against the toxic forms of Abeta believed to drive plaque formation and AD progression. By inducing plaque clearance and efficiently inhibiting plaque formation in the brain, ACI-24 has the potential to delay or slow AD progression.
ACI-24 is being investigated in the ongoing ABATE randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 1b/2 trial to assess its safety, tolerability, immunogenicity and pharmacodynamic effects. Data so far show that ACI-24 is generally safe and well tolerated, and that it has generated anti-Abeta antibody responses at all tested doses.
Cohorts AD1, AD2 and AD3 enrolled a total of 74 patients who received ACI-24 at escalating dose levels. The 12-month data readouts from Cohorts AD1, AD2 and AD3 are expected later in Q2 2026. Cohort AD4 will include an initial group of 36 patients treated for 12 months, with follow-up of 6 months, significantly expanding the safety and biomarker efficacy data set. A subsequent expansion of the AD4 cohort could potentially see the total number of subjects reach approximately 112 patients.
Under the terms of the agreement with Takeda,
About ACI-24
This product is AC Immune’s anti-Abeta active immunotherapy candidate. The ABATE randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 1b/2 trial of ACI-24 for treatment of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) continues fully blinded (NCT05462106). Enrolled patients are required to have a diagnosis of prodromal AD:
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