Exhibit 99.1
Climb Bio to Provide Budoprutug Development Strategy and Corporate Update at Virtual Investor Event
Completes Transition to Immune-Mediated Disease Focused Company
Highlights Additional Data from Phase 1b Primary Membranous Nephropathy (pMN) Study with plans to
Advance to Late Phase Development in 2025
Outlines Plans for Clinical Trials in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) and Immune
Thrombocytopenia (ITP) with First Patients Dosed Targeted for 1H25
Cash runway through 2027 Expected to Enable Delivery of Key Value Inflection Points
Virtual Investor Event to be Held at 12:00 p.m. ET Today
WELLESLEY HILLS, MASS., —(GLOBE NEWSWIRE) – October 15, 2024 – Climb Bio, Inc. (Nasdaq: CLYM), will be hosting a virtual investor event, today, October 15, 2024, from 12:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m. ET. The event will feature members of Climb Bio’s management team who will provide an update on the Company’s development strategy for budoprutug, an anti-CD19 monoclonal antibody with potential to treat a broad range of B-cell mediated diseases. The event will also feature Dr. Frank Cortazar, Director of the New York Vasculitis and Glomerular Center and Chief of Clinical Research at St. Peter’s Health Partners, who was the primary investigator in the Phase 1b trial of budoprutug in pMN. Dr. Cortazar will present additional data from the completed pMN trial and share clinical data from a single patient with Minimal Change Disease (MCD) treated with budoprutug.
“Our mission at Climb Bio is to develop better treatments for the approximately 50 million patients in the U.S. and many more globally living with immune-mediated diseases,” said Aoife Brennan, President and CEO of Climb Bio. “We are off to a great start with some world class talent and a cornerstone asset, budoprutug. We believe CD19 is the optimal target for B-cell mediated diseases and that an antibody is the modality with the broadest potential to help patients. We are thrilled today to share our development strategy and promising preclinical and clinical data that underscore our enthusiasm for budoprutug’s potential.”
Dr. Cortazar added, “I know firsthand the challenges of managing patients with pMN and the need for new treatment options. The patients in the pMN trial demonstrated high rates of complete clinical remission, as well as rapid reductions in B-cells and anti-PLA2R antibodies, two key biomarkers for pMN. These data potentially support a significant advancement in our fight against this challenging condition, and I am hopeful to continue to help advance this innovative therapy for those in need.”