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Active SBIR-STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Neural Ice Technology for Treatment of Pain

$9.99M USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ARTHRITIS AND MUSCULOSKELETAL AND SKIN DISEASES
Recipient Organization Brixton Biosciences, Inc.
Country United States
Start Date Aug 21, 2024
End Date Jul 31, 2026
Duration 709 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 11006862
Grant Description

Project Summary Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is one of the most performed orthopedic surgeries to relieve joint pain in patients with end-stage osteoarthritis (OA) or rheumatic arthritis (RA). In the US, over 700,000 TKA procedures are performed annually. To manage TKA pain patients are commonly prescribed opioids, contributing to a

spiraling opioid epidemic. The misuse and addiction to opioids is a national public health crisis with an estimated economic burden of $78.5 billion per year. As opioid addiction is now a national health focus, novel non-opioid and non-pharmacological treatments for postoperative pain are a top scientific priority. There is an

urgent need for a long-lasting, drug-free means of relieving post-TKA pain–which is the overall goal of this project. Cryoneurolysis is an opioid-sparing, perioperative intervention used to reduce postoperative pain. Current cryoneurolysis methods apply very low-temperature cryoprobes to freeze peripheral nerves, resulting

in reversible and long-lasting pain relief. However, due to extremely cold temperatures (–88oC and below) in direct contact with a nerve and surrounding tissues, these methods are not nerve-selective nor easy to administer. They also are not injectable, making the treatments time-consuming and challenging to adopt in

clinic. Our initial goal – an easier to use, injectable method of cryoneurolysis to reduce postoperative pain from TKA, significantly reducing or eliminating the use of opioids. We invented a novel injectable and nerve-selective cryoneurolysis method that overcomes the limitations of current options. Neural Ice™ can be injected around sensory peripheral nerves that transmit

pain. We have shown in a rat model that injection of our ice-slurry, formulated to bring peri-nerve temperatures to around -5oC, extracts enough thermal energy to reversibly disrupt nerve structure and reduce pain sensation for up to 8 weeks without damage to surrounding tissue. At the end of 2023, we also completed an initial 16-

patient feasibility study showing significant pain reduction response with no serious adverse events (See Significance). In response to these findings (pre-clinical and clinical) in October 2023 the FDA granted Brixton Breakthrough Designation. In Phase II, we seek to optimize a clinical use device that produces an injectable, biocompatible, and

sterile ice slurry which meets the FDA requirements for an Investigative Device Exemption (IDE) for a pivotal efficacy trial. With our HEAL Phase I grant we generated single-use, terminally sterilized pre-filled syringes that contain on-demand injectable slurry for use at point-of-care facilities. In Phase II we seek to

optimize our design for human use (ease, effectiveness, cost, etc.) and test for in-vivo biologic response in rat model. We will also establish manufacturing of human use system & prepare to submit pivotal trial IDE application to the FDA at the end of the funding period. If successful, our study will lead to the

development of a novel, long-lasting and non-opioid treatment for patients with post-TKA pain.

All Grantees

Brixton Biosciences, Inc.

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