Disc Medicine Presents Positive Clinical Data Updates Across Portfolio at the European Hematology Association (EHA) 2025 Annual Congress

On June 12, 2025 Disc Medicine, Inc. (NASDAQ:IRON), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on the discovery, development, and commercialization of novel treatments for patients suffering from serious hematologic diseases, reported 5 posters presented at the EHA (Free EHA Whitepaper) 2025 annual meeting in Milan, Italy (Press release, Disc Medicine, JUN 12, 2025, View Sourcenews-releases/news-release-details/disc-medicine-presents-positive-clinical-data-updates-across" target="_blank" title="View Sourcenews-releases/news-release-details/disc-medicine-presents-positive-clinical-data-updates-across" rel="nofollow">View Source [SID1234653841]). This year’s presentations included data from HELIOS, an ongoing open-label extension study of bitopertin in EPP, which showed favorable long-term efficacy and safety with sustained protoporphyrin IX (PPIX) reductions, improvement in quality of life, and improved liver biomarkers. Disc is advancing development and registrational activities for bitopertin in EPP, with plans to submit an NDA in H2 2025. The company has initiated APOLLO, a confirmatory clinical trial of bitopertin in adults and adolescents with EPP. Disc recently launched a campaign to raise awareness of EPP among physicians, patients, and caregivers with emphasis on the causative role of PPIX accumulation in the disease. Learn more at PPIXisWhy.com.

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Disc also presented longer term data from the continuation phase of its Phase 1b trial in MF anemia, showing sustained activity on key biomarkers and durable anemia response among major responders. Enrollment for the Phase 2 RALLY-MF trial of DISC-0974 is ongoing with the exploratory cohort for patients on concomitant momelotinib or pacritinib fully enrolled. The company expects to present initial RALLY-MF data in H2 2025. Additionally, Disc shared an update of the Phase 1 healthy volunteer trial of DISC-3405, initially presented at ASH (Free ASH Whitepaper) 2024, which demonstrated deep, sustained reductions in serum iron and meaningful changes in hematologic parameters, establishing proof of mechanism. Based on these data, the company has initiated a Phase 2 trial of DISC-3405 in polycythemia vera (PV). Disc also presented an iron pulse study of DISC-3405 in healthy volunteers which showed inhibition of dietary iron uptake, further confirming the mechanism of action and supporting DISC-3405’s potential in diseases of iron overload.

The collection of data presented at EHA (Free EHA Whitepaper) adds to the evidence base supporting Disc’s continued advancement of all three clinical candidates and provides support for expansion opportunities in new indications. Management will host a call to review these updates on June 16 at 8:00 am ET. Please register for the event on the Events and Presentations page of Disc’s website (View Source)

Bitopertin, DISC-0974, and DISC-3405 are investigational agents and are not approved for use as therapies in any jurisdiction worldwide.

Summary of Poster Presentations

Bitopertin:

HELIOS:

HELIOS is an ongoing Phase 2, open-label, long-term extension trial that enrolled 86 adult and adolescent patients with EPP from the BEACON and AURORA trials. Patients were randomized to receive 20 mg or 60 mg bitopertin in BEACON and 20 mg or 60 mg bitopertin or placebo in AURORA, with all patients transitioning to a 60 mg daily dose of bitopertin in HELIOS.

Longer term treatment with bitopertin was associated with sustained reductions in the disease-causing toxin PPIX, with additional benefit for patients receiving the 60 mg dose continuously
Continuous treatment with 60 mg of bitopertin reduced ALT and other exploratory hepatobiliary biomarkers
Nearly all participants reported substantial improvements in quality of life measures
Bitopertin exhibited a favorable longer-term safety profile with up to 2+ years of exposure and similar safety across adults and adolescents with EPP and XLP
DISC-0974:

DISC-0974 Phase 1b in MF anemia:

Data from the continuation phase of the Phase 1b trial of DISC-0974 in MF anemia as of October 2024 were presented. This multi-center, open-label trial included patients who were: non-transfusion dependent receiving no transfusions (nTD, n=23), transfusion dependent with low transfusion burden (TD Low, n=5) and transfusion dependent with high transfusion burden (TD High, n=7). The trial was comprised of both patients receiving concomitant JAK inhibitor therapy (n=13) and not receiving JAK inhibitor therapy (n=22). DISC-0974 was administered subcutaneously at 14 mg (n=1), 28 mg (n=7), 50 mg (n=12), 75 mg (n=9), or 100 mg (n=6) every 4 weeks for up to 6 treatments. Long-term results demonstrated:

Sustained hepcidin suppression, iron mobilization, and reduction in Zinc PPIX, a measure of iron restricted hemoglobin production
nTD patients:
50% of evaluable patients achieved major response of sustained mean hemoglobin increase of ≥1.5 g/dL
Hematologic improvement was durable through the continuation phase
TD Low patients:
80% of evaluable patients achieved major response of transfusion independence over 16 weeks
Hematologic improvement was durable, and all major responders remained transfusion independent during the continuation phase
TD High patients:
40% of evaluable patients achieved major response of transfusion independence over 12 weeks
1 of 2 patients with a major response entered the continuation phase and remained transfusion independent at Day 225, with follow-up ongoing
DISC-0974 was safe and well-tolerated at all evaluated dose levels
DISC-0974 in combination with luspatercept and ESA (mouse model):

The effect of DISC-0974, luspatercept, and ESA as single agents and DISC-0974 combined with luspatercept or ESA on hematological parameters in wild type mice was evaluated. Results showed:

Treatment with DBIO-100 (a mouse analog of DISC-0974) suppressed hepcidin, enhanced iron availability, and boosted erythropoiesis in wild-type mice
Combining with DPO (ESA) or RAP-536 (mouse analog of luspatercept) led to additional hematological benefits beyond those agents alone
These results demonstrate that DISC-0974 has a distinct mechanism of action among anemia-targeted agents and highlight the potential for synergistic anemia benefits when combining DISC-0974 with other anemia-targeted agents.

DISC-3405:

Phase 1 Healthy Volunteer Study:

Updated SAD/MAD data from the Phase 1 trial of DISC-3405 in healthy volunteers were presented. In the SAD portion of this trial, healthy males and females ages 18 to 65 were given a single dose of placebo (n=10) or DISC-3405 at 75 mg intravenously (IV) (n=6), 37.5 mg subcutaneously (SC) (n=6), 75 mg SC (n=6), 150 mg SC (n=6), or 300 mg SC (n=6). The MAD portion included placebo (n=4), 75 mg SC (n=6), and 150 mg SC (n=6) cohorts dosed every 4 weeks for a total of 2 doses. Consistent with data presented at ASH (Free ASH Whitepaper) 2024, results showed:

DISC-3405 produced dose-related increases in serum hepcidin with corresponding reductions in serum iron across all dose levels
DISC-3405 resulted in deep reductions in serum iron (ranging from 50-80% from baseline) that were sustained and support a once-monthly SC dosing regimen
Single and repeat dosing of DISC-3405 demonstrated meaningful reductions in hematologic parameters, including reticulocyte hemoglobin, hemoglobin, and hematocrit
DISC-3405 was generally well-tolerated at all evaluated dose levels, with no serious adverse events (AEs), greater than Grade 2 AEs, or AEs leading to study withdrawal
These results provide proof of mechanism and support the advancement DISC-3405 into proof of concept studies. Disc has now initiated a Phase 2 trial of DISC-3405 in PV with initial results expected in 2026.

Iron Pulse Study:

Disc conducted an iron pulse study in healthy volunteers to evaluate the effectiveness of DISC-3405 in inhibiting dietary iron uptake. N=8 healthy volunteers received placebo treatment followed by oral ferrous sulfate tablets on two sequential occasions to establish baseline iron absorption profiles. Participants were then given a single 150mg IV dose of DISC-3405, followed by oral ferrous sulfate "iron pulses" on the 2nd and 15th days following treatment. DISC-3405 resulted in an average 94% reduction in iron absorption at Day 2 and 68% at Day 15.

These results confirm the mechanism of DISC-3405 and demonstrate its ability to block dietary iron absorption, supporting the potential for treating diseases associated with iron overload.