Other Planned Trials

These trials are upcoming but are not currently recruiting.

Recursion

Recursion hopes to launch the next phase of its REC-994 clinical trial. The Recursion team continues to analyze the Phase 2 safety study and long-term extension study data and is working with regulators to chart the path forward. We expect more news by the end of 2025.

Neurelis

Neurelis has the license to bring the ROCK inhibitor NRL-1049 to trials specifically for CCM. BioAxone developed the medicine as BA-1049 and licensed it to Neurelis for trials. The medicine is in early Phase 2 clinical trials in the United States.

Ovid therapeutics/graviton bioscience

Ovid and Graviton are working to develop a ROCK2-specific inhibitor known as OV-888 (formerly GV101) to target CCM. Graviton developed the medicine and has licensed it to Ovid for clinical trials. A Phase 2 trial is on hold as Ovid integrates learnings from the atorvastatin and REC-994 trials.

repurposed medicines

Several medicines already on the market for other indications are seeking funding for Phase 2 or Phase 3 trials with our patients:

Propranolol

Propranolol has already completed a small multi-center safety trial in Italy. According to the research abstract:

Propranolol was safe and well tolerated in this population. Propranolol might be beneficial for reducing the incidence of clinical events in people with symptomatic familial cerebral cavernous malformations, although this trial was not designed to be adequately powered to investigate efficacy. A definitive phase 3 trial of propranolol in people with symptomatic familial cerebral cavernous malformations is justified.

Funding is being sought through multiple European agencies.

Low-dose Aspirin

While it seems counter-intuitive, some researchers believe that antithrombotic medicines do not increase hemorrhage risk and that low-dose aspirin may offer protective effects against hemorrhage. Multiple retrospective case series studies have offered supporting evidence. Funding is being sought in the UK for a clinical trial.

Rapamycin

Rapamycin, also known as sirolimus, is an mTOR inhibitor used in multiple disorders involving vascular malformations and has been tested in patients with other slow-flow vascular malformations. It has been tried in acute mouse models of CCM and appears to have an effect. Funding for a clinical trial is being sought in the US and a clinical trial has begun in China.

3.31.2025