Firebrick Pharma Limited announced that trial statisticians have completed their efficacy analysis of the headline results in the Phase 3 trial of Nasodine® Nasal Spray as a treatment for the common cold. The analysis has shown that the trial did not meet its primary endpoint, which was the impact of Nasodine on overall cold severity (GSS) in subjects with a confirmed viral infection (ITTi). Based on the reported results, the placebo (sterile water) performed better than Nasodine. In the QoL (`quality-of-life') measure (functional impairment caused by a cold), the results were also in favour of the placebo in the ITTi. Similar enigmatic results were seen in other population subsets. The results provided to the Company are shown in the table titled: Trial Headline Results Summary. These results are compared in summary form with the previous (2019) Phase 3 trial in the table titled: Phase 3 Trial Comparisons on Key Endpoints. The 2019 trial used the same protocol and treatment regimen as the current (2022-23) trial
and both trials were robust Phase 3 trials. The 2019 trial took place in Australia, so a comparison of the results with the current trial for Australian sites only has been undertaken (not shown in summary tables). In the 2019 trial, the GSS benefit of Nasodine in the viral-infected subjects (N=52) was 22.9% (p=0.048), but in the current trial, for Australian sites, the benefit was reversed, with the water placebo outperforming Nasodine by 22.7% in the ITTi (N=181), the result being statistically significant (p=0.024). The reported results also appear to conflict with the Company's recently reported Phase 2 COVID-19 trial, where Nasodine treatment led to 100% clearance of the SARS-CoV-2 virus from the nasal passages. That result was significantly better than the placebo (p=0.028), which was the same water placebo as used in the 2022-23 Phase 3 trial. The Company is concerned that the results are so confounding, unexpected and at odds with previous data that there may be a systematic error or other issue in the data, and a detailed analysis is now underway to try to identify any causes of such an error. To that end, the Company is working with the Contract Research Organisation (CRO) responsible for trial governance and other service providers to thoroughly investigate the trial results. At this time, there is no evidence that the placebo and Nasodine treatments were switched during production, distribution or treatment.