Pharming Group announces first patient dosed in Phase II clinical trial of leniolisib for common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) with immune dysregulation

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Pharming Group N.V.
Pharming Group N.V.

Multi-center clinical trial includes sites located in the US, UK and EU

Second Phase II clinical trial studying leniolisib for additional primary immunodeficiencies (PIDs)

CVID patients demonstrate clinical phenotypes similar to APDS, with global prevalence estimated at approximately 39 per million

Leiden, the Netherlands, March 20, 2025: Pharming Group N.V. (“Pharming” or “the Company”) (EURONEXT Amsterdam: PHARM/Nasdaq: PHAR) announces that the first patient has been dosed in a Phase II, proof of concept, clinical trial evaluating leniolisib in common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) patients with immune dysregulation.

The Phase II clinical trial is a single arm, open-label, dose range-finding, multi-center study to be conducted in approximately 20 patients 12 years of age and older. The trial will include patients with a CVID diagnosis, a requirement for evidence of lymphoproliferation, and at least one additional clinical manifestation of immune dysregulation, including interstitial lung disease, autoimmune cytopenias, or enteropathy. The objectives for the trial are to assess safety and tolerability, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and explore clinical efficacy of leniolisib in the targeted CVID with immune dysregulation population. The trial has been designed to inform a subsequent Phase III program. The lead investigator for the Phase II study is Jocelyn Farmer, M.D./PhD, Director of the Clinical Immunodeficiency Program of Beth Israel Lahey Health (Lahey Hospital & Medical Center in Burlington, MA), with additional clinical sites in the US, UK and EU.

Jocelyn Farmer, MD, PhD; Allergist and Immunologist, Lahey Hospital & Medical Center, Burlington, MA; Director, Clinical Immunodeficiency Program, Beth Israel Lahey Health, MA; Associate Professor, UMass Chan-Lahey Medical School, Burlington, MA commented:
“As a physician with clinical responsibility for a large group of common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) patients, I understand the significant disease burden they face. This includes autoimmune and end-organ lympho-infiltrative clinical complications resulting from their immune dysregulation. Due to the absence of effective therapies for these CVID patients, the disease manifestations can easily progress, leading to the well-documented early mortality in this patient group. PI3Kẟ is a multi-faceted regulator of lymphocytes, functioning to control their proliferation, differentiation, antibody production and migration, and hence leniolisib has significant potential to treat the immune dysregulation seen in these CVID patients. Therefore, I am very excited that we have dosed our first patient with leniolisib in this phase 2 proof of concept study in CVID patients with immune dysregulation, where leniolisib provides an opportunity to help these patients with a large, unmet medical need.”