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Anavex Life Sciences Announces Positive Precision Medicine Results from up to 4-Years of Oral Blarcamesine Treatment in Phase IIb/III Open-Label Extension Trial in Early Alzheimer’s Disease

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Anavex Life Sciences (NASDAQ:AVXL) announced positive results from up to 4 years of oral blarcamesine treatment in a Phase IIb/III open-label extension trial for early Alzheimer's disease. The study demonstrated significant benefits with up to 84.6 weeks (19.5 months) of 'time saved' in disease progression for early-start treatment patients.

Key findings in the GWAS-identified ABCLEAR24 population (71.7% global frequency) showed substantial improvements in cognition (ADAS-Cog13, -5.43, P=0.0035) and function (ADCS-ADL, +9.50, P<0.0001). The drug demonstrated a favorable safety profile with no treatment-related deaths. The study confirmed blarcamesine's mechanism of restoring impaired autophagy as an early event, preceding amyloid-beta and tau pathologies.

Anavex Life Sciences (NASDAQ:AVXL) ha annunciato risultati positivi dopo fino a 4 anni di trattamento orale con blarcamesina in uno studio di estensione open-label di Fase IIb/III per la malattia di Alzheimer in fase iniziale. Lo studio ha mostrato benefici significativi con fino a 84,6 settimane (19,5 mesi) di 'tempo guadagnato' nella progressione della malattia per i pazienti trattati precocemente.

I risultati chiave nella popolazione ABCLEAR24 identificata tramite GWAS (frequenza globale del 71,7%) hanno evidenziato miglioramenti sostanziali nella cognizione (ADAS-Cog13, -5,43, P=0,0035) e nella funzionalità (ADCS-ADL, +9,50, P<0,0001). Il farmaco ha mostrato un profilo di sicurezza favorevole senza decessi correlati al trattamento. Lo studio ha confermato che il meccanismo d'azione della blarcamesina consiste nel ripristino dell'autofagia compromessa come evento precoce, precedente alle patologie da amiloide-beta e tau.

Anavex Life Sciences (NASDAQ:AVXL) anunció resultados positivos tras hasta 4 años de tratamiento oral con blarcamesina en un ensayo de extensión abierto de fase IIb/III para la enfermedad de Alzheimer en etapa temprana. El estudio demostró beneficios significativos con hasta 84,6 semanas (19,5 meses) de 'tiempo ganado' en la progresión de la enfermedad para pacientes tratados desde etapas iniciales.

Los hallazgos clave en la población ABCLEAR24 identificada por GWAS (frecuencia global del 71,7%) mostraron mejoras sustanciales en la cognición (ADAS-Cog13, -5,43, P=0,0035) y en la función (ADCS-ADL, +9,50, P<0,0001). El medicamento mostró un perfil de seguridad favorable sin muertes relacionadas con el tratamiento. El estudio confirmó que el mecanismo de acción de la blarcamesina es restaurar la autofagia deteriorada como un evento temprano, previo a las patologías de amiloide-beta y tau.

Anavex Life Sciences (NASDAQ:AVXL)� 초기 알츠하이머병� 대� 2b/3� 오픈라벨 연장 시험에서 최대 4년간 경구� 블라르카메신 치료� 긍정적인 결과� 발표했습니다. 연구� 조기 치료 환자에서 질병 진행� 대� 최대 84.6�(19.5개월)� '시간 절약'이라� 유의미한 이점� 보여주었습니�.

GWAS� 확인� ABCLEAR24 인구집단(� 세계 빈도 71.7%)에서� 주요 결과� 인지 기능(ADAS-Cog13, -5.43, P=0.0035)� 기능(ADCS-ADL, +9.50, P<0.0001)에서 상당� 개선� 나타냈습니다. 약물은 우수� 안전� 프로�� 보였으며 치료 관� 사망은 없었습니�. 연구� 블라르카메신� 아밀로이�-베타 � 타� 병리 이전� 초기 단계에서 손상� 자가포식� 회복시키� 기전� 확인했습니다.

Anavex Life Sciences (NASDAQ:AVXL) a annoncé des résultats positifs après jusqu'à 4 ans de traitement oral par blarcamesine dans un essai d'extension en ouvert de phase IIb/III pour la maladie d'Alzheimer précoce. L'étude a démontré des bénéfices significatifs avec jusqu'à 84,6 semaines (19,5 mois) de « temps gagné » dans la progression de la maladie chez les patients traités tôt.

Les résultats clés dans la population ABCLEAR24 identifiée par GWAS (fréquence globale de 71,7 %) ont montré des améliorations substantielles de la cognition (ADAS-Cog13, -5,43, P=0,0035) et de la fonction (ADCS-ADL, +9,50, P<0,0001). Le médicament a présenté un profil de sécurité favorable sans décès liés au traitement. L'étude a confirmé que le mécanisme d'action de la blarcamesine consiste à restaurer l'autophagie altérée comme un événement précoce, précédant les pathologies amyloïde-bêta et tau.

Anavex Life Sciences (NASDAQ:AVXL) gab positive Ergebnisse nach bis zu 4 Jahren oraler Behandlung mit Blarcamesin in einer offenen Verlängerungsstudie der Phase IIb/III bei Frühstadium Alzheimer bekannt. Die Studie zeigte signifikante Vorteile mit bis zu 84,6 Wochen (19,5 Monate) „gewonnener Zeit� im Krankheitsverlauf bei Patienten mit frühzeitigem Behandlungsbeginn.

Wesentliche Ergebnisse in der GWAS-identifizierten ABCLEAR24-Population (weltweite Häufigkeit 71,7 %) zeigten deutliche Verbesserungen in Kognition (ADAS-Cog13, -5,43, P=0,0035) und Funktion (ADCS-ADL, +9,50, P<0,0001). Das Medikament zeigte ein günstiges Sicherheitsprofil ohne behandlungsbedingte Todesfälle. Die Studie bestätigte den Wirkmechanismus von Blarcamesin, der darin besteht, die gestörte Autophagie als frühes Ereignis wiederherzustellen, das Amyloid-Beta- und Tau-Pathologien vorausgeht.

Positive
  • Significant clinical benefit with 84.6 weeks (19.5 months) of 'time saved' in disease progression
  • Strong efficacy in ABCLEAR24 population (71.7% global frequency) with significant improvements in cognition and function
  • Favorable safety profile with no treatment-related deaths
  • Enhanced efficacy in SIGMAR1 wild type carriers (ABCLEAR1) showing 49.8% improvement in ADAS-Cog13
  • Convenient once-daily oral dosing offering better accessibility for patients
Negative
  • Some patients experienced dizziness as a treatment-emergent adverse event
  • Benefits are primarily observed in specific genetic populations, potentially limiting broader applicability

Insights

Positive Phase IIb/III results show blarcamesine significantly delays Alzheimer's progression with 19.5 months 'time saved' in genetically-identified patients.

Anavex's latest data from their extended Phase IIb/III trial of oral blarcamesine reveals compelling evidence of disease-modifying effects in early Alzheimer's disease patients. The most striking finding is the concept of 'time saved' - up to 84.6 weeks (19.5 months) in patients with specific genetic profiles (ABCLEAR24, representing ~71.7% of the population). This represents meaningful disease delay that translates to extended independence for patients.

The data demonstrates significant improvement in both cognitive function (ADAS-Cog13 difference: �5.43, P = 0.0035) and activities of daily living (ADCS-ADL difference: +9.50, P < 0.0001) for early-start treatment. These are substantial, clinically meaningful improvements across the critical domains that matter to patients and caregivers.

What's mechanistically fascinating is blarcamesine's action on autophagy - the cellular 'clean-up' process that becomes impaired in Alzheimer's. Unlike antibody treatments targeting amyloid or tau directly, blarcamesine works upstream through SIGMAR1 activation, potentially addressing the disease process earlier. This approach could be complementary to existing therapies.

The precision medicine approach employed here is particularly noteworthy. By identifying specific genetic profiles (non-mutated SIGMAR1 carriers - ABCLEAR1 population), Anavex demonstrated enhanced efficacy in predisposed responders. This targeted approach yielded improvements of 49.8% on ADAS-Cog13 and 33.6% on CDR-SB versus placebo - substantially better than the general trial population.

The favorable safety profile with convenient oral administration addresses major barriers in current AD treatment landscape. Unlike infusion-based antibody treatments, an effective oral option could dramatically improve accessibility and compliance, potentially reaching a much broader patient population.

Anavex's precision medicine approach shows compelling 4-year data with disease-modifying potential, favorable safety, and convenient oral administration.

The ATTENTION-AD trial design merits particular attention. This was a robust combined 192-week study utilizing a delayed-start methodology - a powerful approach for demonstrating disease modification rather than just symptomatic benefit. By comparing early-start versus late-start treatment groups, researchers effectively showed that earlier intervention produces superior long-term outcomes that cannot be recovered by later treatment initiation.

The statistical significance achieved across both primary endpoints is particularly meaningful. The ITT population showed significant differences in ADAS-Cog13 (LS mean difference �3.83, P = 0.0165) and ADCS-ADL (LS mean difference +4.30, P = 0.0206) at Week 192, favoring early treatment. These magnitudes of effect represent clinically meaningful benefits that would be noticeable to patients and caregivers.

Even more impressive are the results in the genetically-defined ABCLEAR24 population, where the treatment effect nearly doubled for some measures. The genetic stratification approach employed here represents a significant advancement in Alzheimer's clinical trial methodology. By identifying genetic markers that predict enhanced response (covering ~70% of the population), Anavex has potentially outlined a path to dramatically improved efficacy in a substantial patient subset.

The safety profile appears favorable with no treatment-related deaths and primarily mild, transient adverse events like dizziness. This contrasts with some amyloid-targeting therapies that have shown ARIA (amyloid-related imaging abnormalities) in significant percentages of patients.

The upstream mechanism targeting autophagy presents a novel approach that could potentially complement existing therapies. Rather than directly targeting amyloid or tau, blarcamesine addresses an earlier pathological process, which could offer advantages for earlier intervention or combination therapy approaches.

New clinical Precision Medicine population data demonstrates up to 84.6 Weeks (19.5 Months) ‘time saved� by early-start

ADAS-Cog13 difference: �5.43 (P = 0.0035), ADCS-ADL difference: +9.50 (P < 0.0001)

Restoring impaired autophagy as early event, preceding amyloid-beta and tau

Oral presentation at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC) 2025

NEW YORK, July 31, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Anavex Life Sciences Corp. (“Anavex� or the “Company�) (Nasdaq: AVXL), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing innovative treatments for Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, schizophrenia, neurodevelopmental, neurodegenerative, and rare diseases, including Rett syndrome, and other central nervous system (CNS) disorders, announced today the latest findings for blarcamesine, an oral small molecule for the potential treatment of early Alzheimer’s disease.

The data were presented by Marwan Noel Sabbagh, MD, Professor of Neurology, and Chairman of the Anavex Scientific Advisory Board at the 2025 Alzheimer's Association International Conference (AAIC), held in Toronto.

The ATTENTION-AD (ANAVEX®2-73-AD-EP-004) open-label extension (OLE) Phase IIb/III treatment trial followed the 48-week ANAVEX®2-73-AD-004 double-blind (DB) clinical trial, with a combined duration of up to 192 weeks. The trial was designed to evaluate the safety and tolerability of blarcamesine as well as its long-term effects on cognition (ADAS-Cog13) and function (ADCS-ADL) in participants with early Alzheimer’s disease.1

Blarcamesine-treated patients continue to accrue benefit through up to 4 years, as measured by the prespecified clinical endpoints ADAS-Cog13 and ADCS-ADL, respectively. In the intent-to-treat (ITT) population, delayed-start analysis of treatment with oral blarcamesine was significant for both cognition and function, reflecting the importance of early treatment initiation. For ADAS-Cog13 a significant difference between the early-start and late-start treatment groups at Week 192 (LS mean difference ���3.83, P = 0.0165) was observed.2 Similarly, for ADCS-ADL at Week 192 statistical significance (LS mean difference +4.30, P = 0.0206) was reached, both favoring the early-start group. Additionally, the GWAS-identified3 population ABCLEAR24, with a global frequency of ~71.7%5, showed further improvement in both cognition, ADAS-Cog13 (LS mean difference �5.43, P = 0.0035), and function, ADCS-ADL (LS mean difference +9.50, P < 0.0001), respectively. This clinical Precision Medicine population data demonstrates up to 84.6 Weeks (19.5 Months) of ‘time saved� by the early-start analysis.

In Alzheimer's disease clinical trials, ‘time saved� refers to the estimated amount of time a treatment delays the progression of the disease, allowing patients to maintain functionality and independence longer. This approach provides a clinically meaningful measure, as it directly relates to the impact on a patient's daily life.6,7 Additionally, blarcamesine exhibited a favorable safety profile with no treatment-related deaths.

“This Precision Medicine data provide potentially continued persuasive evidence that earlier initiation of treatment with blarcamesine may have a significant positive impact on disease progression and may provide sustained clinically meaningful benefits to patients with early Alzheimer’s disease over the long-term,� said Dr. Sabbagh. “Prespecified delayed-start analysis indicate disease-modifying effect of oral blarcamesine and highlight the importance of early and continued long-term treatment of chronic Alzheimer’s disease. These enhanced clinically meaningful improvements are accompanied by blarcamesine’s favorable safety profile. This could help reduce crucial barriers within the currently complex healthcare ecosystem for Alzheimer's disease and potentially provide broader access to a diverse population with early Alzheimer's disease.�

Further presentations at the AAIC 2025 Conference featured prespecified Precision Medicine Phase IIb/III 48-week ANAVEX®2-73-AD-004 double-blind (DB) clinical trial data on blarcamesine, confirming the upstream mechanism of blarcamesine, restoring impaired autophagy as an early event, preceding amyloid-beta and tau.

The mechanistic confirmation that blarcamesine restores impaired autophagy through SIGMAR1 activation by acting upstream of amyloid and tau pathologies at the molecular level was previously established both in vitro and in vivo. Specifically, studies demonstrated enhanced autophagic flux in human cells and in C. elegans as well as increased proteostasis capacity, ultimately ameliorating paralysis caused by protein aggregation in C. elegans.8

A clinical Precision Medicine approach confirmed that the prespecified SIGMAR1 non-mutated population, termed ABCLEAR19, which represents up to ~70% of the global population, achieved deeper clinical responses to blarcamesine than the respective ITT population, hence also confirming clinical activation of SIGMAR1 through blarcamesine. Additional non-mutated populations with potentially enhanced responses could also be identified through Genome-Wide Association Study (GWAS) analyses. Data confirmed that within a heterogeneous Alzheimer’s disease population by targeting a prevalent genetic profile through Precision Medicine approach, the efficacy of blarcamesine may be further improved.

While in the ITT population trial participants showed significant improvement versus placebo after 48 Weeks in the ANAVEX®2-73-AD-004 double-blind (DB) clinical trial by 36.3% for the key endpoints, ADAS-Cog13 and 27.6% for CDR-SB, respectively, a further, also significant, improvement was observed in the prespecified analysis of SIGMAR1 wild type (WT) carriers, ABCLEAR1 population.10 Compared to the ITT population, the ABCLEAR1 population demonstrated additional and consistent improvement versus placebo. ADAS-Cog13 and CDR-SB for the total blarcamesine group improved by 49.8% and 33.6%, respectively and for the 30 mg blarcamesine group by 49.1% and 35.5%, respectively. For the 30 mg blarcamesine group, serious treatment emergent adverse events (TEAEs) occurred in 10 participants (12.7%) receiving blarcamesine and in 6 participants (9.1%) receiving placebo. Common TEAEs included dizziness, which was transient and mostly mild to moderate in severity. There were no deaths in the blarcamesine 30 mg group, and one death occurred in the placebo group.

“We remain excited about these enhanced clinically meaningful improvements which were further confirmed by the observed efficacy treatment effects from the two blarcamesine clinical trials with identified Precision Medicine patient populations,� said Juan Carlos Lopez-Talavera, MD, PhD, Head of Research and Development of Anavex. “Convenient once-daily oral dosing of blarcamesine may allow us to offer a scalable and patient friendly oral pill administration option to patients with early Alzheimer’s.�

“We are motivated by the Anavex team’s continued contributions to advancing science across this devastating chronic disease at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference 2025. Alzheimer’s disease, like other chronic progressive diseases, requires a long-term therapeutic strategy. Blarcamesine’s Precision Medicine mechanism of action with its convenient once daily oral dosing may lead to greater clinical benefit,� said Christopher U Missling, PhD, President and Chief Executive Officer of Anavex. “Additionally, the comprehensive data from the blarcamesine Alzheimer’s disease program represents a solid foundation for continuous engagement with the Alzheimer’s disease community.�

The respective presentations are available on the Investors section of the Company’s website at .

This release discusses investigational uses of an agent in development and is not intended to convey conclusions about efficacy or safety. There is no guarantee that any investigational uses of such product will successfully complete clinical development or gain health authority approval.

About Anavex Life Sciences Corp.

Anavex Life Sciences Corp. (Nasdaq: AVXL) is a publicly traded biopharmaceutical company dedicated to the development of novel therapeutics for the treatment of neurodegenerative, neurodevelopmental, and neuropsychiatric disorders, including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, schizophrenia, Rett syndrome, and other central nervous system (CNS) diseases, pain, and various types of cancer. Anavex's lead drug candidate, ANAVEX®2-73 (blarcamesine), has successfully completed a Phase 2a and a Phase 2b/3 clinical trial for Alzheimer's disease, a Phase 2 proof-of-concept study in Parkinson's disease dementia, and both a Phase 2 and a Phase 3 study in adult patients and one Phase 2/3 study in pediatric patients with Rett syndrome. ANAVEX®2-73 is an orally available drug candidate designed to restore cellular homeostasis by targeting SIGMAR1 and muscarinic receptors. Preclinical studies demonstrated its potential to halt and/or reverse the course of Alzheimer's disease. ANAVEX®2-73 also exhibited anticonvulsant, anti-amnesic, neuroprotective, and anti-depressant properties in animal models, indicating its potential to treat additional CNS disorders, including epilepsy. The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research previously awarded Anavex a research grant, which fully funded a preclinical study to develop ANAVEX®2-73 for the treatment of Parkinson's disease. We believe that ANAVEX®3-71, which targets SIGMAR1 and M1 muscarinic receptors, is a promising clinical stage drug candidate demonstrating disease-modifying activity against the major hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease in transgenic (3xTg-AD) mice, including cognitive deficits, amyloid, and tau pathologies. In preclinical trials, ANAVEX®3-71 has shown beneficial effects on mitochondrial dysfunction and neuroinflammation. Further information is available at . You can also connect with the Company on , , and .

Forward-Looking Statements

Statements in this press release that are not strictly historical in nature are forward-looking statements. These statements are only predictions based on current information and expectations and involve a number of risks and uncertainties. Actual events or results may differ materially from those projected in any of such statements due to various factors, including the risks set forth in the Company’s most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date hereof. All forward-looking statements are qualified in their entirety by this cautionary statement and Anavex Life Sciences Corp. undertakes no obligation to revise or update this press release to reflect events or circumstances after the date hereof.

For Further Information:
Anavex Life Sciences Corp.
Research & Business Development
Toll-free: 1-844-689-3939
Email:

Investors:
Andrew J. Barwicki
Investor Relations

Tel: 516-662-9461
Email:


1 The scheduled visits were [OLE Week 0 = Combined Week 48], [OLE Week 48 = Combined Week 96], [OLE Week 96 = Combined Week 144] and [OLE Week 144 = Combined Week 192]; Combined = OLE (open-label-extension) + DB (double-blind) trials.
2 ADAS-Cog13 scores LS mean difference between the treatment groups being larger than 2 points are considered clinically meaningful improvements: Muir RT, Hill MD, Black SE, Smith EE. Minimal clinically important difference in Alzheimer's disease: Rapid review. Alzheimers Dement. 2024;20(5):3352-3363.
3 GWAS = Genome-Wide Association Study
4 ABCLEAR2 = Alzheimer’s Blarcamesine Cognition Efficacy and Resilience gene variant non-carrier population
5 Source: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/snp/
6 Petersen, R C et al. “Expectations and clinical meaningfulness of randomized controlled trials.” Alzheimer's & dementia: the journal of the Alzheimer's Association vol. 19,6 (2023): 2730-2736.
7 Dickson, S P et al. �"Time Saved" Calculations to Improve Decision-Making in Progressive Disease Studies.� The journal of prevention of Alzheimer's disease. vol. 11,3 (2024): 529-536.
8 Christ, M G et al. “Sigma-1 Receptor Activation Induces Autophagy and Increases Proteostasis Capacity In Vitro and In Vivo.� Cells vol. 8,3 211. 2 Mar. 2019.
9 ABCLEAR1 = Alzheimer’s Blarcamesine Cognition Efficacy and Resilience gene variant non-carrier population (SIGMAR1 wild type [WT])
10 Macfarlane, S et al. “Blarcamesine for the treatment of Early Alzheimer's Disease: Results from the ANAVEX2-73-AD-004 Phase IIB/III trial.� The journal of prevention of Alzheimer's disease. vol. 12,1 (2025).


FAQ

What are the latest clinical trial results for Anavex's (AVXL) blarcamesine in Alzheimer's disease?

The Phase IIb/III trial showed up to 84.6 weeks of 'time saved' in disease progression, with significant improvements in cognition (ADAS-Cog13: -5.43, P=0.0035) and function (ADCS-ADL: +9.50, P<0.0001) in the ABCLEAR24 population.

How long was the duration of AVXL's Alzheimer's disease trial for blarcamesine?

The trial combined a 48-week double-blind study with an open-label extension, reaching a total duration of up to 192 weeks (approximately 4 years).

What is the safety profile of Anavex's blarcamesine for Alzheimer's treatment?

Blarcamesine showed a favorable safety profile with no treatment-related deaths. Common side effects included dizziness, which was typically transient and mild to moderate in severity.

How does AVXL's blarcamesine work in treating Alzheimer's disease?

Blarcamesine works by restoring impaired autophagy through SIGMAR1 activation, acting upstream of amyloid and tau pathologies at the molecular level.

What percentage of the population could benefit from AVXL's Alzheimer's treatment?

The ABCLEAR24 population represents approximately 71.7% of the global population, while the SIGMAR1 non-mutated population (ABCLEAR1) represents up to 70% of the global population.
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Biotechnology
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