
Tolebrutinib Gets FDA Priority Review
The US FDA is evaluating under priority review the regulatory submission of tolebrutinib to treat non-relapsing secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (nrSPMS) and to slow disability accumulation independent of relapse activity in adult patients
The target action date for the FDA decision is September 28, 2025. A regulatory submission is also under review in the EU.
The regulatory submissions in the US and the EU are supported by the results from the phase III studies HERCULES in nrSPMS and GEMINI 1 and 2 in relapsing MS (RMS). The findings from these studies, as well as additional clinical and preclinical studies, support the differentiated mechanism of tolebrutinib to target disability progression independent of relapse activity, and the scientific hypothesis that smoldering neuroinflammation represents a key inflammatory process in MS and is a critical driver of disability accumulation.
Erik Wallström, MD, PhD Global Head of Neurology Development: “The totality of data across our clinical program validates our scientific understanding of smoldering neuroinflammation as a distinct inflammatory process in MS. People living with non-relapsing secondary progressive multiple sclerosis or who experience disability independent of relapse activity suffer from disability that worsens over time due to persistent inflammation in the brain, known as smoldering neuroinflammation, which is the primary driver of disability. The demonstrated ability of tolebrutinib to delay disability by targeting underlying drivers of the disease represents a potential paradigm shift in treating these patients.”
Tolebrutinib is currently under clinical investigation, and its safety and efficacy have not been evaluated by any regulatory authority. The PERSEUS phase III study of tolebrutinib in patients with primary progressive MS is currently ongoing with study results anticipated in H2 2025.
HERCULES (clinical study identifier: NCT04411641) was a double-blind randomized phase III clinical study evaluating the efficacy and safety of tolebrutinib in patients with nrSPMS. At baseline, nrSPMS was defined as having a SPMS diagnosis with an expanded disability status scale (EDSS) between 3.0 and 6.5, no clinical relapses for the previous 24 months and documented evidence of disability accumulation in the previous 12 months. Participants were randomized (2:1) to receive either an oral daily dose of tolebrutinib or matching placebo for up to approximately 48 months. The primary endpoint was 6-month CDP defined as the increase of ≥1.0 point from the baseline EDSS score when the baseline score is ≤5.0, or the increase of ≥0.5 point when the baseline EDSS score was >5.0. Secondary endpoints included time to onset of 3-month CDP as assessed by EDSS score, total number of new or enlarging T2 hyperintense lesions as detected by MRI, time to onset of confirmed disability improvement, 3-month change in 9-hole peg test and T25-FW test as well as the safety and tolerability of tolebrutinib.
GEMINI 1 (clinical study identifier: NCT04410978) and GEMINI 2 (clinical study identifier: NCT04410991) were double-blind randomized phase III clinical studies evaluating the efficacy and safety of tolebrutinib compared to teriflunomide in patients with RMS. Participants were randomized in both studies (1:1) to receive either tolebrutinib and placebo daily or 14mg teriflunomide and placebo. The primary endpoint for both studies was the annualized relapse rate for up to approximately 36 months defined as the number of confirmed adjudicated protocol defined relapses. Secondary endpoints included time to onset of CDW, confirmed over at least 6 months, defined as an increase of ≥1.5 points from the baseline EDSS score when the baseline score is 0, an increase of ≥1.0 point from the baseline EDSS score when the baseline score is 0.5 to ≤5.5 or an increase of ≥0.5 point from the baseline EDSS score when the baseline score was >5.5 in addition to the total number of new and/or enlarging T2 hyperintense lesions as detected by MRI from baseline through the end of study, the total number of Gd-enhancing T1 hyperintense lesions as detected by MRI from baseline through the end of study and the safety and tolerability of tolebrutinib.