Definium’s LSD-based depression pill delivers strong late-stage results, shares surge

  • Companies
June 22 (Reuters) – Definium Therapeutics (DFTX.O), opens new tab said a single dose of its LSD-based experimental pill ​significantly reduced symptoms of major depression in patients in a late-stage ‌trial, sending its shares soaring 55% to a more than four-year high on Monday.
The experimental drug helped patients record significantly lower scores on a standard depression scale than those ​on placebo after six weeks, with an 8.1-point difference, meeting the ​trial’s main goal, the company said.
The pill, DT120, belongs to a ⁠class of drugs known as classic psychedelics, which temporarily alter perception, mood ​and thinking. It is a pharmaceutical formulation of lysergide, better known as LSD, ​and works by activating serotonin receptors in the brain.
In April, U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order to speed up access to psychedelic-based treatments.
Definium shares, which have gained about 174% ​so far this year, were trading up 52% at $37.23.
Needham analyst Ami Fadia ​called the results “unprecedented in the depression space,” adding the drug showed greater reductions in scores ‌at ⁠six weeks than Johnson & Johnson’s (JNJ.N), opens new tab Spravato and Compass Pathways’ (CMPS.O), opens new tab COMP360 achieved at week four.
Axsome Therapeutics’ (AXSM.O), opens new tab Auvelity and Sage Therapeutics’ Zurzuvae are some of the other treatments for major depressive disorder (MDD).
“DT120 could emerge as a worthy competitor in the ​MDD / TRD space with ​a strong ⁠clinical profile,” Fadia added.
Definium said the data brings it closer to an FDA submission and it was running a second ​late-stage depression trial.
The drug was generally well-tolerated, with 99% ​of adverse ⁠events mild to moderate, occurring mainly on the day of dosing, and no serious safety issues or increase in suicidal thoughts observed.
The trial enrolled 149 participants aged ⁠18-74 ​years with MDD, the second-most common mental health ​disorder in the U.S., with more than 21 million adults experiencing a major depressive episode each ​year.

Read more Uber board sued over alleged ‘serial’ compliance failures, sexual abuse lawsuits

Read more Greenspan playbook to get a replay under Warsh

Read more Trading Day: Mixed signals, Wall Street wobbles

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *