Valo Health’s diabetic retinopathy drug failed to improve patients’ symptoms in a Phase 2 study, and the company is now on the hunt for a partner.
The company
said
Tuesday that OPL-0401 did not meet the study’s primary or secondary endpoints, which assessed changes in disease severity. Valo said that “certain doses” showed “potential evidence of preventing disease progression.”
It will be up to another company to explore that signal, with Valo suspending development and looking for another company to take the asset forward. Valo originally in-licensed the ROCK inhibitor in 2021 from Sanofi.
The data marked a disappointing end to one of the company’s earliest bets, though CEO Brian Alexander appeared to soften the blow by noting in the announcement that OPL-0401 did not originate out of Valo’s discovery platform. The focus moving forward will be using the Opal platform to find new targets, he said.
Alexander
took the helm in November
after interim CEO Graeme Bell departed. Bell stepped up from the CFO position in early 2024, replacing founding CEO David Berry. When Bell exited, Pioneering Medicines president Paul Biondi took over as executive chairman.
Valo has been trying to find its footing since launching in 2019 and
failing to reach Wall Street
via a Khosla Ventures-led SPAC in November 2021. It received a jolt of capital and validation in late 2023, when Novo Nordisk
handed over $60 million in upfront
and near-term payments for three cardiovascular programs, with more than $2 billion available in biobucks for up to eight other programs.
It’ll be Alexander’s job to right the ship. He previously was CEO of Foundation Medicine, a Roche company focused on cancer genomics.