Aura Biosciences Receives FDA Clearance of Investigational New Drug Application for Light-activated AU-011 for the Treatment of Ocular Melanoma
Aura Biosciences, a biotechnology company developing a new class of therapies to target and selectively destroy cancer cells using viral nanoparticle conjugates, announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has cleared the investigational new drug application (IND) for the company’s lead program, light-activated AU-011 in ocular melanoma (OM). This active IND enables Aura to begin initial clinical testing of AU-011, a unique targeted therapy that could transform the primary treatment of patients with OM, a rare and life-threatening disease.
“Early detection of ocular melanoma, combined with the administration of AU-011 as a potential vision-sparing therapy, could transform the treatment of patients with this devastating disease,” said Brian Marr, M.D., Director of the Ophthalmic Oncology Service at Columbia University Medical Center. Dr. Marr is the principal investigator for the AU-011 clinical trial and also is a member of Aura’s Clinical Advisory Board.
“Receiving IND clearance to enter the clinic for AU-011 is an important step in the development pathway for this novel class of drugs, and I’m thankful to our team of dedicated employees, as well as to our distinguished scientific and clinical advisors, for their contributions that have propelled us to this point,” said Elisabet de los Pinos, Ph.D., founder and CEO of Aura. “With the advancement of AU-011, we are opening the door for innovation in a completely new therapeutic area where there are no FDA drugs approved today. Our hope is that AU-011 could be used to treat small primary melanomas early, with the potential to eliminate the tumor and preserve vision for patients.”
The Phase 1b open-label, single ascending dose clinical trial currently enrolling is designed to evaluate the safety, immunogenicity and preliminary efficacy of two dose levels of AU-011 for the treatment of small-to-medium primary OM. Screening procedures for eligible patients are underway at five clinical trial sites across the country.