Cognition’s Positive Phase 2 ‘SHIMMER’ Study of Zervimesine (CT1812) in Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB) will be Presented in a Podium Presentation at ILBDC

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Cognition Therapeutics, Inc.
Cognition Therapeutics, Inc.

– Study demonstrated strong therapeutic responses across behavioral, functional, cognitive, and movement measures in patients with mild-to-moderate DLB –

– Zervimesine-treated participants tested 86% better on behavioral outcomes (NPI A-L), 52% on activities of daily living, 91% on cognitive fluctuations, 62% on motor symptoms compared to placebo –

PURCHASE, N.Y., Jan. 30, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Cognition Therapeutics, Inc., (the Company or Cognition) (NASDAQ: CGTX), a clinical stage company developing drugs that treat neurodegenerative disorders, announced that James E. Galvin, MD, MPH will present topline results from the ‘SHIMMER’ study of zervimesine (CT1812) in dementia with Lewy bodies during an oral presentation at the International Lewy Body Dementia Conference (ILBDC). Dr. Galvin is director of the Comprehensive Center for Brain Health at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and was the study director and principal investigator on the SHIMMER study grant from the National Institute of Aging. The presentation is taking place on January 31, 2025 at 2:00 pm local time in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

“Dr. Galvin’s presentation is an important opportunity to educate an international audience of advocates, scientists and physicians about the impressive efficacy signals that were observed in participants treated with zervimesine (CT1812),” stated Anthony O. Caggiano, MD, PhD, Cognition’s CMO and head of R&D. “DLB is a complex disease with an array of physical and psychological symptoms that can progress rapidly and are ultimately fatal. Zervimesine-treated participants tested higher across behavioral, cognitive, functional and motor symptoms than their placebo-treated counterparts.”

The Phase 2 SHIMMER study randomized 130 adults with mild-to-moderate DLB who took a daily oral dose of zervimesine or placebo for six months. The study met its primary endpoint of safety and tolerability. As will be presented at ILBDC, zervimesine-treated DLB patients scored an average of 86% better than placebo-treated patients on the neuropsychiatric inventory (NPI) A-L at the end of the study. This tool describes the frequency and severity of 12 separate behavioral symptoms. In SHIMMER, patients receiving zervimesine had fewer or less severe hallucinations and delusions and less anxiety and agitation than placebo-treated patients. These symptoms are a hallmark of DLB and can be debilitating for patients. The reduction in these behavioral symptoms was measured not only in patients but also in their care partners, who reported improvements in their levels of distress caused by these symptoms.