An Update on Progress at Repair Biotechnologies, Developing Means to Regress Atherosclerotic Plaque
Atherosclerosis is the development of fatty plaques that narrow blood vessels and eventually rupture to cause a stroke or heart attack, the most common cause of human mortality. Atherosclerotic plaque is a consequence of a runaway process of failure in the behavior of cells responsible for clearing excess cholesterol from blood vessel walls. Cholesterol is needed by every cell in the body, but largely only manufactured in the liver. A complex system of transport particles moves cholesterol to and from the liver via the bloodstream. Macrophages in the blood vessel walls clean up excess cholesterol and move it back into the bloodstream, but as aging progresses these macrophages become ever more vulnerable to being overwhelmed by localized cholesterol excess. Eventually, a plaque forms as an area of inflammation and toxic cholesterol and cholesterol derivatives, drawing in macrophages to be killed, adding their mass to the plaque.
As you may know, I founded Repair Biotechnologies with Bill Cherman back in 2018 that has since been developing a means to regress atherosclerotic plaque. The biggest challenge for present cardiovascular medicine is that the primary strategy of lowering circulating LDL cholesterol via lifestyle, statins, PCSK9 inhibition, and other more recently developed methods only slows plaque growth and very slowly over years somewhat stabilizes the most unstable plaques. It does not produce sizable or reliable regression of plaque, and this is why atherosclerosis remains the single largest cause of human mortality: 27% of all deaths are via heart attack and stroke, and other varieties of cardiovascular disease caused by obstructive plaque may contribute meaningfully to the demise of another 10-15% of our species. Here I'll point out a recent interview and update on our progress and explanation of our lead drug and how it works.
Developing a Drug To Reverse Heart Disease
So let's get straight into the lead candidate. REP-0003, can you give us the quick, layman's version on how that works?
Firstly, it's actually REP-0004 now that is the lead candidate. We updated the sequence, but these two drugs are both very similar. They are lipid nanoparticles that encapsulate messenger RNA (mRNA) and then deliver it directly to the liver and nowhere else in the body. It goes to the liver via the normal mechanisms of lipid nanoparticle delivery. The particles are sized to pass through the blood vessel walls for glands like the liver, and the liver is the usual destination for things that are injected intravenously anyway.
Secondly, there's a ligand on the surface that only interacts with receptors present on hepatocytes in the liver, so that then delivers the mRNA into the cells through the receptor-mediated endocytosis; the mRNA escapes the endosome into the cell, where it is processed into a fusion protein. That fusion protein is just a selection of human proteins that are not normally expressed together in any cell. When acting together they very selectively break down only excess intracellular free cholesterol. By free cholesterol, I mean unmodified cholesterol.
This produces a variety of benefits to your liver, because excess free cholesterol serves no useful purpose and is toxic if you have too much of it inside a cell. Normally, a cell will attempt to take that free cholesterol and keep just a little bit of it, and the rest of it gets esterified into lipid droplets or put into the cell membrane or handed off in some way. But, if you get fat or you get old, in both cases, this process stops working as well, and you have too much free cholesterol inside your cells. I should emphasize this really isn't just a problem of obesity. You can have thin people with excessive intracellular free cholesterol in their liver and elsewhere in their bodies.
Now, when you reduce free cholesterol in the liver, the organ kicks it back into working properly. It also makes the liver feel like it's in a cholesterol deficit, even if it isn't. So, it will try to pull as much cholesterol back from the rest of the body as it can. Various mechanisms of homeostasis will dial up reverse cholesterol transport, and drag back free cholesterol from the rest of the body to the liver, where it then gets intercepted by our fusion protein and broken down. This feedback loop operates for the few days that the protein is present in the body as a result of an mRNA therapy, and the outcome is a draining of excess free cholesterol everywhere, not just the liver. That reduces inflammation. It improves tissue function throughout the body, outside the brain at least, as the brain has its own fairly distinct cholesterol metabolism.
The two outcomes of greatest interest at the moment are, firstly, a dramatic regression of atherosclerotic plaque very rapidly, and secondly, a reversal of liver disease, such as metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis. You also get a reduction in fibrosis. It happens very rapidly and dramatically, and that is how the drug works.
How receptive has the FDA been to this approach?
They like it. The FDA looked at our materials for the pre-IND and said, "Yes, we agree. Go do this." No, they didn't note any meaningful objections, just the usual small feedback. They granted us an orphan drug designation for treatment of the accelerated atherosclerosis that characterizes the rare disease of homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia, and they don't hand that out like candy. The FDA has to really be interested in what you're doing for that to happen. We were granted orphan drug designation mid last year, and right now we're applying to the Rare Disease Evidence Principles (RDEP) program, which is a new next-level addition to the orphan drug designation. This was announced late last year, and right now nobody really knows, including the FDA, how this program will work out in detail. In principle, it should speed the path to approval for these rare disease therapies where it's somewhat more difficult to organize trials than for a more common condition. The FDA is going to rely more on preclinical evidence and post-approval assessment of the drug than on trials. We'll see how it develops.
This interview was conducted a few months ago at this point, and Repair Biotechnologies has since been granted eligibility for the Rare Disease Evidence Principles program.