SBIR-STTR Award

Multi-functional anti-thrombotic therapy for coronary microvascular obstruction
Award last edited on: 3/11/2025

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NHLBI
Total Award Amount
$2,942,885
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
837
Principal Investigator
Ridong Chen

Company Information

APT Therapeutics Inc (AKA: Advanced Protein Technologies Inc.)

4041 Forest Park Avenue
Saint Louis, MO 63108
   (314) 800-4742
   info@apt-therapeutics.com
   www.apt-therapeutics.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 01
County: St. Louis city

Phase I

Contract Number: N/A
Start Date: 5/1/2023    Completed: 4/30/2026
Phase I year
2023
Phase I Amount
$1
Direct to Phase II

Phase II

Contract Number: 1R44HL169132-01
Start Date: 5/1/2023    Completed: 4/30/2026
Phase II year
2023
(last award dollars: 2024)
Phase II Amount
$2,942,884

Adjunctive antithrombotic treatment with dual antiplatelet therapy (aspirin + P2Y12 antagonist) plus anticoagulant (heparin or bivalirudin) is an established treatment regimen for percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) patients. Despite aggressive antithrombotic therapy, myocardial perfusion after PCI remains inadequate in many patients. Recurrent thrombosis and dose-limiting bleeding complications continue to occur in a significant number of patients. Attempts to further improve clinical outcomes have led to the development of more potent platelet P2Y12 inhibitors including prasugrel and ticagrelor, and direct factor Xa inhibitors, rivaroxaban and apixaban (not approved for PCI), but increase bleeding complications. Moreover, none of the current antithrombotics provide effective protection against coronary microvascular obstruction. This results in microinfarcts accompanied by inflammation, which is a determinant of patient prognosis, independent from infarct size. Clearly, the next milestones for acute AMI treatment are to break the link between antithrombotic potency and bleeding risk and to protect the myocardium and coronary microcirculation against reperfusion injury that causes chronic adverse left ventricle remodeling and heart failure. APT402 is a novel therapeutic fusion protein of an optimized human apyrase and annexin V that provides antiplatelet, anticoagulant, and cardioprotective activities. We hypothesize that the fusion will target the antithrombotic effect to the site of coronary thrombosis and synergistically attenuate thrombosis and reperfusion injury with minimal bleeding risk. In a rabbit carotid artery electrical injury model, APT402 preferably bound to the injured site and to the thrombus. Treatment with clopidogrel, ticagrelor, low molecular weight heparin, or bivalirudin alone failed to fully prevent occlusion with significantly increased bleeding. In contrast, APT402 maintained 100% patency without increasing bleeding time, PT, or aPTT. Strikingly, APT402 more effectively attenuated arterial thrombosis than ticagrelor plus bivalirudin. In this direct Phase II SBIR application, we propose to determine whether acute treatment with APT402 more effectively protects microvascular circulation and improves heart function in a clinically relevant model of thrombogenic myocardial infarction, while reducing bleeding risks compared to ticagrelor plus heparin, the standard-of-care treatment during PCI in the contemporary era of radial access. We have also assembled an experienced drug development team and will advance critical activities necessary to enable IND filing. Specific Aim 1. Using a porcine model of thrombogenic coronary microembolization, determine whether APT402 more effectively reduces coronary microvascular obstruction and improves LV function 60 days after reperfusion with less bleeding compared to ticagrelor plus heparin. Specific Aim 2. Manufacture cGMP grade APT402. Specific Aim 3. Evaluate nonclinical safety of APT402. Successful completion of the proposed studies will strongly support IND filing and clinical trials to improve outcomes for millions of patients with acute myocardial infarction and other thrombotic diseases.

Public Health Relevance Statement:
Principal Investigator/Program Director (Last, First, Middle: Chen, Ridong NARRATIVE We will determine whether treatment with a novel thrombus-targeting fusion protein is more effective in attenuating microvascular obstruction and protecting hearts in an established porcine model of acute myocardial infarction while reducing bleeding complications compared to the standard-of-care treatment with ticagrelor plus heparin. Terms: