Ocugen Provides Business Update with First Quarter 2025 Financial Results

In This Article:

Ocugen
Ocugen

Conference Call and Webcast Today at 8:30 a.m. ET

  • OCU400 Phase 3 clinical trial for retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is progressing well and on target for potential BLA/MAA filings by mid-2026

  • Anticipate initiating OCU410ST Phase 2/3 pivotal confirmatory clinical trial for Stargardt disease mid- 2025

MALVERN, Pa., May 09, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Ocugen, Inc. (Ocugen or the Company) (NASDAQ: OCGN), a pioneering biotechnology leader in gene therapies for blindness diseases, today reported first quarter 2025 financial results along with a general business update.

“All three of our novel modifier gene therapies are advancing through the clinic and we are on track to meet our goal of three Biologics License Application (BLA)/Marketing Authorization Application (MAA) filings in the next three years,” said Dr. Shankar Musunuri, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Co-Founder of Ocugen. “We remain steadfast in our mission to provide a one-time therapy for life to address considerable unmet medical needs that exist for millions of patients facing the terrifying prospect of losing their vison.”

In January, the Company announced positive two-year long-term safety and efficacy data from the Phase 1/2 clinical trial of OCU400 for RP that demonstrated a durable, clinically meaningful, and statistically significant (p=0.005) improvement in visual function (LLVA) in all evaluable treated subjects at two years when compared to untreated eyes. Additionally, 100% (10/10) of treated evaluable subjects demonstrated improvement or preservation in visual function compared to untreated eyes. This data further supports the gene-agnostic mechanism of action of OCU400, a broad RP treatment not restricted to specific mutations, with durability.

The OCU400 Phase 3 liMeliGhT clinical trial is open to all eligible RP patients—early to advanced stage RP including pediatric subjects age 5+—regardless of gene mutation (syndromic and non-syndromic forms of RP). OCU400 has the potential to treat all 300,000 RP patients in the U.S. and EU.

Alignment was reached with the FDA to move forward with a Phase 2/3 pivotal confirmatory trial for OCU410ST for Stargardt disease, which includes an adaptive design with a masked interim analysis at 8 months. Stargardt disease affects 100,000 people in the U.S. and EU. The Phase 2/3 clinical trial will randomize 51 subjects, 34 of whom will receive a single, subretinal, injection of OCU410ST (200 μL at a concentration of 1.5 × 10¹¹ vector genomes/mL) in the eye with worse visual acuity, and 17 of whom will serve as untreated controls. The primary endpoint in the clinical trial is change in atrophic lesion size. Key secondary endpoints include visual acuity as measured by best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) and LLVA compared to untreated controls. One-year data will be utilized for the BLA filing. The latest data from the OCU410ST Phase 1 clinical trial demonstrates atrophic lesions grew slower by 54% at six months in evaluable treated eyes when compared to untreated eyes. In BCVA, treated eyes demonstrated statistically significant (p=0.02) improvement in visual function when compared to untreated fellow eyes. Ocugen plans to initiate the Phase 2/3 study by mid-year with a target BLA filing in 2027.