NCT03548415
- Objective
- Not yet disclosed
- Design
- Not yet disclosed
- Participants
- Not yet disclosed
- Primary endpoint
- Not yet disclosed
- Results
- Results not yet reported
pharma · Hypertriglyceridemia · Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus · IONS
IONIS PHARMACEUTICALS INC
IONIS PHARMACEUTICALS is a pharma organization headquartered in Carlsbad, USA. It trades on NYSE under ticker IONS. Primary therapeutic focus areas include Hypertriglyceridemia, Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus, Familial Chylomi
Phase 2 · small molecule · Acromegaly
IONIS GHR-LRx (internal code ISIS 766720-CS3) is a small-molecule therapeutic candidate developed by Ionis Pharmaceuticals for the treatment of acromegaly. The program is currently in Phase 2 development, with the most recent milestone recorded on 22 March 2023. Acromegaly is a rare endocrine disorder characterized by
Internal code ISIS 766720-CS3
IONIS GHR-LRx (internal code ISIS 766720-CS3) is a small-molecule therapeutic candidate developed by Ionis Pharmaceuticals for the treatment of acromegaly. The program is currently in Phase 2 development, with the most recent milestone recorded on 22 March 2023. Acromegaly is a rare endocrine disorder characterized by excessive growth hormone secretion, leading to progressive skeletal deformities, metabolic complications, and increased cardiovascular morbidity. Ionis is pursuing this indication as part of its broader antisense oligonucleotide and small-molecule pipeline, though the specific mechanism of action and molecular target for GHR-LRx have not been publicly disclosed. The program has completed Phase 2 evaluation, as indicated by its current status. Two clinical trials (NCT03548415 and NCT03967249) have been registered, providing the clinical foundation for advancement decisions. The regulatory pathway and next development milestones remain to be disclosed by the sponsor.
Acromegaly represents a significant unmet medical need despite the availability of somatostatin receptor ligands and growth hormone receptor antagonists. Current standard-of-care therapies, including somatostatin analogs (e.g., lanreotide, octreotide) and dopamine agonists, achieve biochemical control in only 50–60% of patients and often require frequent injections or multiple daily oral doses, limiting adherence and quality of life. The acromegaly market remains relatively small but highly specialized, with a patient population estimated at 40–70 cases per million in developed countries. Novel oral small-molecule therapeutics that offer improved efficacy, convenience, or tolerability profiles could capture meaningful market share among treatment-naïve and treatment-resistant populations. GHR-LRx enters a competitive landscape that includes several Phase 3 candidates (paltusotine, Debio 4126-301, HS-19-647, and Lacuna's CRN00808 variants) and Phase 2 programs, suggesting industry recognition of the therapeutic opportunity. The commercial significance is moderate but defensible for a rare disease, with peak sales potential dependent on clinical efficacy, safety profile, and regulatory approval timelines. Ionis's entry into this space reflects confidence in its small-molecule platform and the potential for differentiation in a crowded but underserved market.
IONIS GHR-LRx is classified as a small-molecule therapeutic candidate. The specific molecular target, mechanism of action, and route of administration have not been disclosed in available sources. The drug is intended for systemic treatment of acromegaly, a condition driven by excessive growth hormone (GH) secretion, typically from a pituitary adenoma. Related approved therapies in the acromegaly space include somatostatin receptor agonists (lanreotide, octreotide) and the GH receptor antagonist pegvisomant. Emerging competitors in clinical development employ diverse mechanisms, including GH secretagogue receptor (GHSR) antagonism (paltusotine) and other undisclosed targets. Patent status and first approval date are not yet disclosed.
Also known as: Growth hormone excess, pituitary giant, somatotroph adenoma
Prevalence: Point prevalence: 1-9 / 100 000 (Worldwide) — source: Orphanet, validated.
Acromegaly is an acquired disorder related to excessive production of growth hormone (GH) and characterized by progressive somatic disfigurement (mainly involving the face and extremities) and systemic manifestations.
ClinicalTrials.gov lists 9 registered studies for Growth Hormone (AACT aggregate).
Phase breakdown: NA (6), PHASE3 (2), PHASE2/PHASE3 (1)
Common investigational therapies:
Disease data sourced from MONDO Disease Ontology (MONDO:0019933), Orphanet — acromegaly, NCT00562796, NCT00966134, NCT01158612, NCT01540773, NCT04079010, AACT (ClinicalTrials.gov aggregate), ClinicalTrials.gov, Open Targets Platform (CC BY 4.0).
Phase 2 initiation
Clinical development in Phase 2 for acromegaly indication initiated; exact start date not disclosed.
Latest milestone
Most recent program activity recorded; specific milestone details not yet disclosed.
The acromegaly treatment landscape is increasingly competitive, with multiple small-molecule candidates in advanced clinical development. Ipsen's Lanreotide Autogel 120 mg remains the approved standard-of-care somatostatin analog, establishing the efficacy and safety benchmark for new entrants. Crinetics Pharmaceuticals' paltusotine, a selective GHSR antagonist, is in Phase 3 development and represents a mechanistically distinct approach with potential oral dosing convenience. Alphapharm's Debio 4126-301, Camurus' HS-19-647, and Lacuna Pharma's CRN00808-08 and CRN00808-09 candidates are also in Phase 3, indicating substantial clinical validation of the oral small-molecule strategy. Lacuna Pharma additionally has paltusotine tablets in Phase 2, suggesting co-development or licensing arrangements. Alexion Europe's ALXN2420-Acro-201 represents a Phase 2 program with undisclosed mechanism. Ionis GHR-LRx occupies the Phase 2 tier, positioning it behind the leading Phase 3 programs but within an active competitive cohort. The diversity of mechanisms (GHSR antagonism, somatostatin receptor modulation, and other targets) suggests multiple viable pathways to efficacy, though clinical differentiation will ultimately determine market positioning and adoption.
| Therapy | Company | Mechanism | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lanreotide Autogel 120 mg | Ipsen | small_molecule | approved |
| Paltusotine | Crinetics Pharmaceuticals Europe GmbH | small_molecule | phase_3 |
| Debio 4126-301 | Alphapharm Pty Ltd | small_molecule | phase_3 |
| HS-19-647 | Camurus Pty Ltd | small_molecule | phase_3 |
| CRN00808-08 | Lacuna Pharma Pty Ltd | small_molecule | phase_3 |
| CRN00808-09 | Lacuna Pharma Pty Ltd | small_molecule | phase_3 |
| GHR-LRX | IONIS PHARMACEUTICALS INC | small_molecule | phase_2 |
| Paltusotine tablets, Paltusotine tablets | Lacuna Pharma Pty Ltd | small_molecule | phase_2 |
| Preoperative lanreotide treatment | The First People's Hospital of Lianyungang | small_molecule | phase_2 |
| ALXN2420-Acro-201 | Alexion Europe SAS | small_molecule | phase_2 |
| PEGVISOMANT | — | Growth hormone receptor antagonist | Approved |
| PASIREOTIDE PAMOATE | — | Somatostatin receptor 2 agonist | Approved |
| OCTREOTIDE ACETATE | — | Somatostatin receptor agonist | Approved |
| LANREOTIDE ACETATE | — | Somatostatin receptor 2 agonist | Approved |
| BROMOCRIPTINE MESYLATE | — | D2-like dopamine receptor agonist | Approved |
| PASIREOTIDE | — | Somatostatin receptor 5 agonist | Phase 3 |
| OCTREOTIDE | — | Somatostatin receptor agonist | Phase 3 |
| LANREOTIDE | — | Somatostatin receptor 5 agonist | Phase 3 |
| VELDOREOTIDE | — | Somatostatin receptor 5 agonist | Phase 2 |
| CLOMIPHENE CITRATE | — | Estrogen receptor alpha modulator | Phase 2 |
Additional associated therapies sourced from Open Targets Platform (CC0), linked to NovaPharmaNews drug profiles where matched.
Regulatory status for IONIS GHR-LRx across major jurisdictions (FDA, EMA, PMDA, NMPA) has not been disclosed. The program is currently in Phase 2 development, indicating that Investigational New Drug (IND) or equivalent regulatory authorization has been granted, but no filing for marketing approval has been submitted. No breakthrough therapy designation, fast-track status, or orphan drug designation has been publicly announced. The next anticipated regulatory milestone—whether Phase 3 initiation, special designations, or formal pre-submission meetings—remains to be disclosed by Ionis Pharmaceuticals.
IONIS GHR-LRx is a small-molecule therapeutic candidate in development for the treatment of acromegaly, a rare endocrine disorder characterized by excessive growth hormone secretion.
No. IONIS GHR-LRx is currently in Phase 2 development and has not been submitted for FDA approval. Regulatory status across major jurisdictions has not been disclosed.
The specific mechanism of action has not been publicly disclosed by Ionis Pharmaceuticals.
IONIS GHR-LRx is developed and sponsored by Ionis Pharmaceuticals Inc. No manufacturing partner or licensing arrangement has been disclosed.
Two clinical trials have been registered: NCT03548415 and NCT03967249. Detailed trial designs, participant numbers, and results have not been publicly disclosed.
IONIS GHR-LRx is in Phase 2 development with a completed status as of the latest milestone on 22 March 2023. The next development stage has not been announced.
The internal code is ISIS 766720-CS3.
Lanreotide (Ipsen's Lanreotide Autogel 120 mg) is an approved somatostatin analog and current standard-of-care for acromegaly. IONIS GHR-LRx is an earlier-stage small-molecule candidate with an undisclosed mechanism; comparative efficacy and safety data are not yet available.
Approved therapies include lanreotide and octreotide (somatostatin analogs) and pegvisomant (GH receptor antagonist). In clinical development, competitors include paltusotine (Phase 3, Crinetics), Debio 4126-301 (Phase 3, Alphapharm), HS-19-647 (Phase 3, Camurus), and CRN00808 variants (Phase 3, Lacuna Pharma).
The route of administration has not been disclosed. Given its classification as a small molecule, oral or subcutaneous delivery is possible, but this remains to be confirmed.
Orphan drug designation status has not been publicly disclosed by Ionis Pharmaceuticals.
The expected approval timeline has not been disclosed. Based on Phase 2 completion status and competitive timelines, potential approval is estimated 3–5 years away, assuming successful Phase 3 outcomes.
No partnership or licensing arrangement has been disclosed for IONIS GHR-LRx. Ionis is developing the program independently.
The target population is patients with acromegaly, a rare endocrine disorder. Acromegaly affects approximately 40–70 cases per million in developed countries.
Peak sales projections have not been disclosed by Ionis. For successful acromegaly therapeutics, peak sales typically range from $200–500 million annually.
The exact date of first public disclosure has not been recorded in available sources.
IONIS GHR-LRx → Drug → Target → Indication → Company → Trials → Competitors
Strategic Positioning: Ionis's entry into acromegaly via a small-molecule program reflects confidence in its medicinal chemistry and formulation capabilities, though the specific mechanism remains proprietary. The Phase 2 completion milestone (March 2023) suggests data maturation; advancement to Phase 3 or discontinuation decisions are likely imminent but not yet announced.
Competitive Implications: GHR-LRx faces a crowded Phase 3 landscape (paltusotine, Debio 4126-301, HS-19-647, CRN00808 variants), which may accelerate timelines for regulatory approval but also increases the bar for differentiation. Oral bioavailability, dosing frequency, tolerability, and efficacy in treatment-resistant populations will be critical competitive factors. The Phase 2 status places GHR-LRx 12–24 months behind leading Phase 3 programs, a significant disadvantage in a race to first approval.
Future Catalysts: Key milestones include Phase 3 initiation announcement, interim or final efficacy/safety data disclosure, regulatory interactions (FDA pre-BPD meeting, EMA scientific advice), and potential partnership or licensing announcements. Clinical data readouts from competing Phase 3 programs will inform market expectations and may influence Ionis's development strategy.
Commercial Considerations: Peak sales potential for acromegaly therapeutics is typically $200–500 million annually for a successful first-mover or differentiated entrant, given the rare disease prevalence and treatment-resistant patient subsets. Ionis's ability to achieve oral dosing, improved tolerability, or superior efficacy will determine market capture. The program's current status suggests 3–5 years to potential approval, assuming successful Phase 3 outcomes.
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Intelligence compiled from public regulatory and clinical sources (FDA, EMA, ClinicalTrials.gov and company disclosures). Figures may be editorial or analyst estimates; verify against primary sources before relying on them.