Arthrosi Therapeutics hasĀ raised $153 million to bankroll its bid to clout gout. The series E financing gives the biotech the financial firepower to deliver data from two phase 3 trials next year.
San Diego-based Arthrosi completed enrollment in a pair of phase 3 gout trials earlier this year. After wrapping up enrollment in the second study in August, the biotech sketched out a timeline that takes in two data drops in 2026 on the way to a filing for approval of pozdeutinurad. Two years afterĀ raising a $75 million series D round, Arthrosi now has the money to execute the next steps in its late-phase strategy.
Arthrosi is aiming to report its first pivotal data on pozdeutinurad in the second quarter of next year. The drug candidate is an inhibitor of URAT1, a transporter that has been a target for gout drugs going back to theĀ approval of probenecid in 1951.
Probenecid and other early gout drugs hit multiple targets and caused a range of side effects. Seeking to avoid the adverse events, developers of subsequent waves of gout drugs tried to create more potent and specific URAT1 inhibitors. AstraZenecaĀ acquired a URAT1 inhibitor in its $1.3 billion takeover of Ardea Biosciences in 2012 and won FDA approval for the drug in 2015. By 2018, the product, Zurampic, hadĀ landed on the scrap heap.Ā Ā
The commercial struggles of Zurampic, which carried a boxed warning, didn't deter others from trying to launch URAT1 inhibitors. A team behind Zurampic hasĀ reformed at Crystalys Therapeutics to advance dotinurad, a URAT1 inhibitor that is approved in Asian markets including Japan. And Chinaās Atom Therapeutic recentlyĀ reported a phase 2b/3 win for its own URAT1 inhibitor, lingdolinurad.Ā Ā
Amid the continued interest in URAT1, a syndicate of investors has bet that Arthrosi can carve out a piece of the market. Prime Eight Capital led the series E round with support from CR Biotech, HighLight Capital, HM Venture Partners, ReliantTech and existing shareholders, according to Arthrosi's Oct. 8 release.