Applied Therapeutics Presents Full 12-Month Clinical Results and New Topline Data from INSPIRE Phase 2/3 Trial of Govorestat in CMT-SORD in Late-Breaking Oral Presentation at the Peripheral Nerve Society 2025 Annual Meeting

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Applied Therapeutics
Applied Therapeutics

Slowing of progression of disease observed via MRI at 24 months

Improvements in outcomes and reduction in sorbitol maintained through 24 months

Statistically significant correlation between absolute reduction in sorbitol and change in 10MWRT and CMT-FOM Lower Limb domain at 12 months, though the primary endpoint of 10MWRT at 12 months was not statistically significant (the measure has since been removed from the CMT-FOM clinical outcomes assessment based upon the results of the ACT-CMT study*)

Statistically significant improvement in CMT-HI and statistically significant correlation between percent change in sorbitol and change in CMT-HI at 12 months

Treatment with govorestat in CMT-SORD-Null rats demonstrated a highly statistically significant 37% (p=0.005) reduction of sorbitol in the sciatic nerve, the tissue of interest, after treatment with govorestat.
Reflective of the peripheral neuropathy experienced by patients with CMT-SORD.

Govorestat remains generally safe and well tolerated

Company remains committed to potential NDA submission of govorestat for treatment of CMT-SORD in 2025

NEW YORK, May 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Applied Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: APLT), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company dedicated to creating transformative treatments for rare disease, today presented full 12-month clinical results and new topline data from 18 and 24 months from the INSPIRE Phase 2/3 trial of govorestat (AT-007) for the treatment of Sorbitol Dehydrogenase (SORD) Deficiency, a subtype of Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease, in an oral presentation at the Peripheral Nerve Society (PNS) 2025 Annual Meeting, being held May 17-20, 2025 in Edinburgh, Scotland.

CMT-SORD is a rare, progressive, neuromuscular disease caused by genetic mutations in the sorbitol dehydrogenase enzyme, which is responsible for the metabolism of sorbitol. Prior to 2020, patients were symptomatically diagnosed as having CMT Type 2 of unknown genetic cause or distal hereditary motor neuropathy. Following a whole genome sequencing initiative in 2020, CMT-SORD was identified as a subtype of CMT and there is now commercially available sorbitol testing and genetic testing specifically for CMT-SORD.

“CMT-SORD is a slowly progressing and very newly identified disease, only becoming officially recognized in 2020. With newly discovered and rare diseases comes an ever-changing landscape of emerging hypotheses and research, requiring the need for flexibility and fluidity in the clinic. This is particularly evidenced with clinical trial design for CMT-SORD, for which there is no natural history data to draw from and an evolving methodology for assessing disease progression. This is exemplified by changes to the CMT-Functional Outcome Measure composite for determining clinical outcomes in CMT-SORD patients, which following the initiation of INSPIRE no longer includes the 10-meter walk-run test,” said Les Funtleyder, Interim CEO and CFO of Applied Therapeutics. Evan Bailey MD, SVP of Clinical Development added, “In the midst of a complicated clinical landscape, we are encouraged by the breadth of data supporting govorestat’s ability to significantly lower blood sorbitol levels and positively impact both functional and patient-reported outcomes including stability and mobility at up to two years of treatment. We have also observed slowing of disease progression at 24 months through MRI scans in patients treated with govorestat. With 90% of remaining patients converting to our open-label extension study, we believe that govorestat has the potential for long-term patient benefit. We look forward to further analyzing the results from the INSPIRE trial to inform and support future potential regulatory interactions with the FDA regarding govorestat for the treatment of CMT-SORD. We want to thank the patients, their families, the investigators and their sites for their willingness and dedication to bringing this important trial forward.”