On June 9, 2026 Kymera Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: KYMR), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company advancing a new class of oral small molecule degrader medicines for immunological diseases, reported that the first participant has been dosed in the first-in-human Phase 1 clinical trial evaluating KT-485 (SAR447971), an oral, potent and selective IRAK4 degrader, in adult healthy volunteers and hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) patients. The Phase 1 trial (NCT07629336) is being conducted by the Company’s partner Sanofi. Under the terms of the collaboration, dosing of the first participant triggered a $20 million milestone payment to Kymera from Sanofi.
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Per the collaboration, Sanofi is leading development, regulatory, and commercial efforts for the program. Kymera is eligible to receive up to $975 million of potential clinical, regulatory and commercial milestones related to KT-485.
"Advancing KT-485, our second generation IRAK4 degrader, into the clinic is an important milestone for our collaboration with Sanofi and our efforts to ultimately bring this important oral therapy to patients," said Nello Mainolfi, PhD, Founder, President and CEO, Kymera Therapeutics. "There remains a significant need for novel oral options that can address key inflammatory pathways implicated in several immuno-inflammatory conditions, and we are excited to collaborate with Sanofi on this work."
The Phase 1 trial will evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and additional exploratory endpoints of orally administered KT-485. The three-part study includes double-blind, placebo-controlled single ascending dose (SAD) and multiple ascending dose (MAD) cohorts, as well as an open-label MAD cohort.
About KT-485/SAR447971
KT-485 is a second generation, oral degrader of IRAK4, that demonstrated increased potency and specificity with a favorable safety profile in preclinical testing. IRAK4 is a scaffolding kinase and key protein of the myddosome complex that mediates signaling through IL-1 and toll-like receptors. IRAK4 acts at the interface of the innate and adaptive immune responses with a variety of functions depending on its kinase activity and scaffolding function. Eliminating IRAK4 completely through degradation impacts both the kinase and scaffolding functions, therefore having the potential to achieve a broad, well-tolerated, anti-inflammatory effect providing a novel oral therapeutic approach for a variety of immuno-inflammatory diseases. KT-485 is being developed under Kymera’s collaboration with Sanofi for IRAK4 degraders outside of oncology and immuno-oncology. Kymera has the option to participate in future development and commercialization, and 50/50 profit split, in the United States and double-digit tiered royalties in ROW.
(Press release, Kymera Therapeutics, JUN 9, 2026, View Source [SID1234666516])