clinical trial in patient populations requiring RBC transfusion for acute and chronic anemia. Results from both trials are expected to be part of a planned modular PMA submission to the FDA, with the planned final PMA module expected to be submitted upon the anticipated completion of the RedeS trial.
“ReCePI investigators will be presenting a number of abstracts with study data at the Annual AABB meeting next week in Houston, including a plenary presentation,” said Richard Benjamin, M.D., Ph.D., Cerus’ chief medical officer. “We have recently begun enrolling at two additional RedeS study sites, including the Turkey site, but we are still assessing the potential impact to the anticipated timing of study completion and modular PMA submission, since these new sites began enrollment later than previously anticipated.”
The new BARDA contract will be funded in whole or in part with federal funds from the Department of Health and Human Services’ Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority under Contract No. 75A50124C00046.
Europe – CE Mark review update
For Cerus’ MDR application in Europe, Cerus’ Notified Body, TÜV-SÜD, reviewed the modules for clinical, non-clinical, manufacturing and quality and found them to be satisfactory. However, the Competent Authority, CBG-MEB, reviewed the active pharmaceutical ingredient module and concluded that the data included in the module were insufficient to support the proposed classification of the impurity profile of the final product, necessitating TÜV-SÜD’s closure of Cerus’ MDR application without an approval. The Company, in collaboration with TÜV-SÜD, is assessing strategies for a potential enhanced new regulatory submission and the associated timeline.
“We continue to believe strongly in the need for pathogen inactivated RBCs and the regulatory dossier we filed in Europe. In addition to how we address the new questions CBG has raised, we want to take this opportunity to be thoughtful about leveraging the additional data that we have accumulated since our original CE Mark submission,” said Carol Moore, Cerus’ senior vice president. “For example, we believe the positive results from our U.S. Phase 3 ReCePI trial substantially expand the data available to evaluate the clinical safety and efficacy of INTERCEPT RBCs. We will be assessing how these data could allow us to propose a broader clinical indication in a potential new CE Mark submission in consultation with TÜV.”
Webcast
The Company will host a webcast later today at 5:00 P.M. EDT, during which management will provide an update on the INTERCEPT red blood cell program. To listen to the live webcast, please visit the Investor Relations page of the Cerus website at http://www.cerus.com/ir.
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