Investigators to Present Clinical Trial Results Showing Neflamapimod Slows Clinical Progression in Dementia with Lewy Bodies in Oral Presentation at AD/PD™ 2025

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CervoMed Inc.
CervoMed Inc.

During the first 16 weeks of the Extension phase of the RewinD-LB clinical study neflamapimod slowed clinical progression compared to controls, as assessed by Clinical Dementia Rating Sum of Boxes (CDR-SB) and Clinical Global Impression of Change (CGIC)

Neflamapimod was associated with a reduced incidence of falls in the Extension phase of the study and new data to be presented at AD/PD™ 2025 demonstrates improvements on endpoints measuring cognitive fluctuations and working memory

The results demonstrate proof-of-concept for neflamapimod as a treatment for dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB)

BOSTON, April 02, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- CervoMed Inc. (NASDAQ: CRVO), a clinical stage company focused on developing treatments for age-related neurologic disorders (CervoMed or the Company), today announced that investigators plan to present results, including new results, from the Extension phase of the Phase 2b RewinD-LB study that show neflamapimod demonstrated a clinically meaningful effect on slowing clinical progression in patients with DLB in an oral presentation during the 19th International Conference on Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s Disease and Related Neurologic Disorders (AP/PD™) on Saturday, April 5, 2025.

“The RewinD-LB Extension phase results for neflamapimod are highly encouraging. We are seeing a clear and meaningful effect on clinical worsening over time in patients with DLB, as assessed by CDR-SB and CGIC, which is further supported by positive data across several additional clinical endpoints,” stated Stephen Gomperts, MD, PhD, Associate Professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School, Director, Lewy Body Dementia Unit at the Massachusetts General Hospital and site Principal Investigator for the RewinD-LB study. “Importantly, these results validate and replicate prior clinical trial results and are consistent with the scientific hypothesis that neflamapimod can provide clinical benefit by arresting the loss of cholinergic neuron function in the basal forebrain.”

“The presentation of the Extension phase data at AD/PD™ 2025 is an opportunity to share our findings and engage deeply with the DLB medical community as we plan for pivotal development and work to bring neflamapimod to patients as rapidly as possible,” said John Alam, MD, Co-Principal Investigator of the RewinD-LB study and CEO of CervoMed. “The positive findings across the primary outcome measure and multiple additional clinically important endpoints evaluated in the first 16 weeks of the Extension phase strengthen our belief that neflamapimod has the potential to be a transformative therapy for patients with DLB.”