Biomea Fusion to Become a Diabetes & Obesity Medicines Company

In This Article:

Biomea Fusion, Inc.
Biomea Fusion, Inc.

Icovamenib & BMF-650 (oral small molecule GLP-1) are the cornerstones 
of the metabolic franchise
Biomea preparing icovamenib for late-stage clinical development
2025 corporate update to be presented at the 43rd Annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference

REDWOOD CITY, Calif., Jan. 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Biomea Fusion, Inc. (“Biomea” or “Biomea Fusion” or “the Company”) (Nasdaq: BMEA), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company dedicated to discovering and developing oral covalent small molecules to improve the lives of patients announced today that the company will become a diabetes and obesity medicines company. Based on the most recent clinical trial results, the strategic focus for icovamenib will be in metabolic disorders. The company will prioritize insulin deficient patients and combination strategies with GLP-1-based therapies for obesity and diabetes. Biomea plans to conclude its studies exploring icovamenib’s potential in oncology and explore partnerships to further advance its oncology assets, while concentrating internal resources on metabolic disorders.

Icovamenib, a potential first-in-class menin inhibitor for the treatment of diabetes, demonstrated the strongest activity in patients with the lowest insulin production
Placebo adjusted 1.5% mean reduction in HbA1c (a measure of blood glucose control) in severe insulin deficient patients uncontrolled on one or more antidiabetic agents at baseline.

Icovamenib showed strong activity in patients uncontrolled on GLP-1-based therapies
Placebo adjusted mean HbA1c reduction of 1.0% in patients suboptimally controlled at baseline with GLP-1-based therapies, consistent with preclinical findings demonstrating enhanced GLP-1 receptor expression and increased glucose-stimulated insulin secretion with the combination of icovamenib and a GLP-1-based therapy such as semaglutide.

Icovamenib demonstrated statistically significant and clinically meaningful benefits validating the mechanism of action
Greater clinical benefits were achieved in patients who were most insulin deficient.

Icovamenib achieved these results while patients were off treatment for 14 weeks
Patients received icovamenib for only 12 weeks, with a primary follow up at Week 26.

Icovamenib was well tolerated and demonstrated a favorable safety profile
No adverse-event related discontinuations, hypoglycemic events, or serious adverse events were reported.

In the prespecified subgroup of severely insulin deficient patients, all patients (100%) responded to 100mg of icovamenib for 12 weeks, displaying a durable reduction in HbA1c 14 weeks after treatment completion, with a continued decline in mean HbA1c while off therapy. In the United States and Europe, these patients represent approximately 20% of the type 2 diabetes patient population. They typically have the lowest insulin production, highest unmet medical need, highest all-cause mortality and worst cardiovascular outcomes. These patients can be easily identified using their HbA1c and body mass index (BMI). These results give us great hope to have identified a pathway with the potential to address diabetes at the root cause level, the depleted pool and function of beta cells. We plan to present further results of the COVALENT-111 trial at an upcoming medical conference.