Has my stock been accused of fraud?Join over 160k users who know.

Ticker Price Change($) Change(%) Shares Volume Prev Close Open Gain($) Gain(%)
Ticker Status Jurisdiction Filing Date CP Start CP End CP Loss Deadline
Ticker Case Name Status CP Start CP End Deadline Settlement Amt
Ticker Name Date Analyst Firm Up/Down Target ($) Rating Change Rating Current

News

Acumen Reported Phase 1 Results for Sabirnetug in Early Symptomatic Alzheimer's Disease At Alzheimer's Association International Conference

Author: Benzinga Newsdesk | July 28, 2024 08:59am

Acumen Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ:ABOS), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing a novel therapeutic that targets toxic soluble amyloid beta oligomers (AβOs) for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), today announced new findings from its Phase 1 INTERCEPT-AD study of sabirnetug (ACU193). The research highlights the experiences of patients in the clinical trial to inform development of future trials, biomarker data to support sabirnetug’s mechanism of action, and an ultra-sensitive method of measuring small amounts of sabirnetug in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The posters will be presented at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC®) 2024 taking place in Philadelphia and online from July 28-Aug. 1, 2024.

“These findings from our Phase 1 study of sabirnetug highlight not only the strength of the study design with participants having early symptomatic AD but also continue to support the potential for sabirnetug as a best-in-class treatment," said Eric Siemers, M.D., Chief Medical Officer of Acumen. “Our research reflects our focus on incorporating the patient voice into drug development, provides further support for the mechanism of action of sabirnetug, and includes developing powerful tools for drug development with an assay that can measure even small amounts of sabirnetug bound to toxic soluble amyloid beta oligomers in patients in our clinical trials. These insights can help us as we advance clinical studies of sabirnetug, including our ongoing Phase 2 study. As recently approved therapies for Alzheimer’s gain traction, we have an opportunity to advance a next-generation treatment that has the potential to optimize the benefit-risk ratio compared to first-generation disease-modifying treatments for AD.”

Understanding th

Posted In: ABOS

CLASS ACTION DEADLINES - JOIN NOW!

NEW CASE INVESTIGATION

CORE Finalist