Citius Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:CTXR), Inc. ("Citius" or the "Company") (CTXR) today announced results from the Company's Phase 2b clinical study of Halo-Lido (CITI-002), a topical formulation for the relief of hemorrhoid symptoms. This trial was designed to assess the efficacy of the combination product, select the appropriate dose and endpoints for a Phase 3 trial and to validate the PRO. The high dose formulation of CITI-002, a lidocaine and halobetasol propionate combination formulation, provided a meaningful reduction in symptom severity, as reported by patients, when compared to individual components alone. Moreover, there were no reported significant adverse events and CITI-002 was well tolerated by patients in the study. Citius intends to schedule an end of Phase 2 meeting with the U.S Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to begin planning the next steps in the regulatory and clinical development program for CITI-002.
CITI-002 Phase 2b Trial Overview
Approximately 300 adults with a clinical diagnosis of symptomatic hemorrhoids were enrolled in the Halo-Lido Phase 2b study (NCT05348200), a multi-center, randomized, dose-ranging, double-blind, parallel group comparison clinical trial. The study assessed a high dose (CITI-002H) and low dose (CITI-002L) formulation of the combination drug products in comparison to the single active drug monads: high dose halobetasol, low dose halobetasol and lidocaine.
Recently, there has been a shift from the use of traditional clinical analysis and outcomes to patients' perspectives and patients' experiences in assessing treatment efficacy. Following the 21st Century Cures Act, higher emphasis is placed on using Patient Reported Outcome (PRO) instruments in clinical trials. Currently, for hemorrhoidal disease, there are no validated clinical outcomes assessment (COA) tools available in the US. The FDA directed Citius to develop a "fit for purpose" PRO instrument to assess the efficacy of treatments in this disease. Symptom intensity and impact data (Hemorrhoid Quality of Life Index or HQLI) were recorded by patients utilizing a proprietary mobile-enabled Patient Reported Outcome (PRO) instrument developed by Citius for this study.
Data collected using the Hemorrhoid Quality of Life Index (HQLI) was analyzed to derive a meaningful change threshold (MCT) to test for the change in hemorrhoidal symptoms considered relevant to the patient during and following treatment.
CITI-002 Phase 2b Trial Results
Treatment effect on hemorrhoidal symptoms was analyzed using the MCT. At the end of the 7-day treatment period, 42% of the patients in the high dose CITI-002 (CITI-002H) group reached MCT compared to patients treated with high dose halobetasol alone (29%) or patients treated with lidocaine alone (21%). Moreover, proportionally more patients in the CITI-002H cohort reported meaningful and statistically significant improvement as compared to patients treated with lidocaine alone (CMH test, p = 0.035).
We additionally assessed clinical treatment efficacy outcomes during 7-day treatment and 7-day follow-up periods using an analysis of covariance, which analyzed changes from baseline. Substantial improvements were seen across all active treatment groups. Although no statistical significance was determined in the changes between the comparison groups, directionally the data signaled that the combination products provided faster relief compared to individual monads, and the relief persisted after completing treatment.
In addition, results from the study indicated that there were no material clinical safety concerns across the five active treatment groups during the 7-day treatment or follow-up periods. There were no serious adverse events reported.
Data from the Phase 2b trial confirmed that the HQLI is appropriate to measure patient-reported changes in hemorrhoidal symptoms. Consequently, Citius believes the instrument can be used in future Phase 3 trial development. Citius is actively pursuing intellectual property protections for its groundbreaking work in developing the fit for purpose PRO instrument and has filed patent applications on its CITI-002 formulations.
Based on the positive clinical results utilizing the Meaningful Change Threshold analysis, Citius plans to present this data at the end of Phase 2 meeting with the FDA.
"We are extremely pleased that we met several key objectives with this Phase 2b trial. Moreover, we have identified an endpoint for meaningful symptom relief utilizing a combination product, selected a dose for a Phase 3 trial, and robustly validated our proprietary PRO as a data collection tool for the next study. The trial showed that proportionately more patients experienced symptom relief with high dose CITI-002 than patients treated with lidocaine or halobetasol alone. With its excellent safety profile and ease of administration for patients as a topical cream, we believe CITI-002 could be an important advancement in the treatment of hemorrhoids. Our preference is to seek a development partner to further advance CITI-002; we plan to initiate that process after determining our next steps in the development of CITI-002," stated Mr.
"To solidify our intellectual property position, we will continue to expand our patent portfolio with pending patent applications for both the formulation and the proprietary assessment of hemorrhoid treatment using PROs. We expect this will support a compelling competitive advantage through 2044, should CITI-002 gain approval in the future," added
Dr.