
RedHill Biopharma Secures Allowance of Key Chinese Patent Application for Proprietary COVID-19 Treatment, RHB-107
COVID-19 Therapeutic Use: Includes coverage for treatment of SARS-CoV-2, including wild-type and emerging variants
This patent grant enhances RedHill's strategic positioning in the global COVID-19 therapeutic space, a market still expected to be worth more than $3 billion in 2025[1], and expands its patent footprint in Asia, a key pharmaceutical market
RHB-107 successfully met the primary endpoint of safety and tolerability, delivering promising reduction in hospitalization efficacy results in a U.S. Phase 2 COVID-19 study[2]. Additional clinical data expected from the externally non-dilutive funded PROTECT study, supported by the U.S. Department of Defense
RHB-107 is a novel, patient-friendly oral, once-daily, host-directed potential broad-acting antiviral expected to act independently of viral spike protein mutations[3]
RALEIGH, N.C. and TEL-AVIV, Israel, April 28, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — RedHill Biopharma Ltd. (Nasdaq: RDHL) ('RedHill' or the 'Company'), a specialty biopharmaceutical company, today announced that the China National Intellectual Property Administration ('CNIPA') has formally allowed a critical use of composition-of-matter patent for RedHill's proprietary investigational compound RHB-107 (upamostat), a potential oral treatment for COVID-19 (patent application No. 202311591091.6).
'This newly allowed Chinese patent application is a significant success, enhancing RedHill's strategic positioning in the global COVID-19 therapeutic space – a market still expected to be worth more than three billion dollars in 2025. It provides broad and robust protection of the use of RHB-107, including its structure in oral formulations targeting SARS-CoV-2 infections, including both wild-type and naturally occurring variants and expanding its patent footprint in Asia, a key pharmaceutical market,' said Guy Goldberg, RedHill's Chief Business Officer. 'It underscores the uniqueness of our antiviral candidate and further strengthens our global intellectual property portfolio as we advance development of a much-needed oral candidate for early, community-based (non-hospitalized) treatment of COVID-19, which still represents a considerable threat to vulnerable patients. As a novel, potentially broad-acting, host-directed antiviral that is expected to act independently of viral spike protein mutations, RHB-107, if approved, could provide a much-needed additional option for use in the early COVID-19 treatment space, alongside Pfizer's Paxlovid.'
Data from RHB-107's U.S. Phase 2 study, published in the International Journal of Infectious Diseases, showed a 100% reduction in hospitalization due to COVID-19, with zero patients (0/41) on the RHB-107 arms versus 15% (3/20) hospitalized for COVID-19 on the placebo-controlled arm (nominal p-value=0.0317). The study also showed an approximately 88% reduction in reported new severe COVID-19 symptoms after treatment initiation, with new severe COVID-19 symptoms reported by only 2.4% of the RHB-107 treated group (1/41) compared to 20% (4/20) of patients in the placebo-controlled arm (nominal p-value=0.036). Further post-hoc analysis showed faster recovery periods from severe COVID-19 symptoms with a median of 3 days to recovery with RHB-107 compared to 8 days with placebo. Additional clinical data is expected from the externally non-dilutive funded PROTECT study, supported by the U.S. Department of Defense.
About RHB-107 (upamostat)
RHB-107 is a proprietary, first-in-class, once-daily orally administered investigational antiviral, that targets human serine proteases involved in preparing the spike protein for viral entry into target cells. Because it is host-cell targeted, RHB-107 is expected to also be effective against emerging viral variants with mutations in the spike protein. RHB-107 is well tolerated; in the initial COVID-19 study, among 41 patients only one reported a drug-related adverse reaction (a mild, self-limited, rash).
In addition, RHB-107 inhibits several proteases targeting cancer and inflammatory gastrointestinal disease. RHB-107 has undergone several Phase 1 studies and two Phase 2 studies, demonstrating its clinical safety profile in approximately 200 patients[4].
RedHill acquired the exclusive worldwide rights to RHB-107, excluding China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Macao, from Germany's Heidelberg Pharma AG (FSE: HPHA) (formerly WILEX AG) for all indications.
About RedHill Biopharma
RedHill Biopharma Ltd. (Nasdaq: RDHL) is a specialty biopharmaceutical company primarily focused on U.S. development and commercialization of drugs for gastrointestinal diseases, infectious diseases and oncology. RedHill promotes the FDA-approved gastrointestinal drug Talicia, for the treatment of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection in adults[5], with submission planned for marketing authorization in other territories. RedHill's key clinical late-stage development programs include: (i) opaganib (ABC294640), a first-in-class, orally administered sphingosine kinase-2 (SPHK2) selective inhibitor with anticancer, anti-inflammatory and antiviral activity, targeting multiple indications with U.S. Government and academic collaborations for development for radiation and chemical exposure indications such as Gastrointestinal-Acute Radiation Syndrome (GI-ARS), a Phase 2 study in prostate cancer in combination with Bayer's darolutamide and a Phase 2/3 program for hospitalized COVID-19 patients; (ii) RHB-204, an all-in-one, fixed-dose, orally administered, combination antibiotic therapy with a planned Phase 2 study for Crohn's disease and Phase 3-stage for pulmonary nontuberculous mycobacterial (NTM) disease; (iii) RHB-104, with positive results from a first Phase 3 study for Crohn's disease; (iv) RHB-107 (upamostat), an oral broad-acting, host-directed, serine protease inhibitor with potential for pandemic preparedness, is in late-stage development as a treatment for non-hospitalized symptomatic COVID-19 and is also targeting multiple other cancer and inflammatory gastrointestinal diseases; and (v) RHB-102, with potential UK submission for chemotherapy and radiotherapy induced nausea and vomiting, positive results from a Phase 3 study for acute gastroenteritis and gastritis and positive results from a Phase 2 study for IBS-D. RHB-102 is partnered with Hyloris Pharma (EBR: HYL) for worldwide development and commercialization outside North America.
More information about the Company is available at: www.redhillbio.com / twitter.com/RedHillBio.
Forward Looking Statement
This press release contains 'forward-looking statements' within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and may discuss investment opportunities, stock analysis, financial performance, investor relations, and market trends. Such statements may be preceded by the words 'intends,' 'may,' 'will,' 'plans,' 'expects,' 'anticipates,' 'projects,' 'predicts,' 'estimates,' 'aims,' 'believes,' 'hopes,' 'potential' or similar words. Forward-looking statements are based on certain assumptions and are subject to various known and unknown risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond the Company's control and cannot be predicted or quantified, and consequently, actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such risks and uncertainties include, without limitation: market and other conditions; the Company's ability to regain and maintain compliance with the Nasdaq Capital Market's listing requirements; the risk that the addition of new revenue generating products or out-licensing transactions will not occur; the risk of current uncertainty regarding U.S. government research and development funding and that the U.S. government is under no obligation to continue to support development of our products and can cease such support at any time; the risk that the CNIPA does not grant the patent in a timely manner or at all; the risk that acceptance onto the RNCP Product Development Pipeline or other governmental and non-governmental development programs will not guarantee ongoing development or that any such development will not be completed or successful; the risk that the FDA does not agree with the Company's proposed development plans for its programs; the risk that the Company's development programs and studies may not be successful and, even if successful, such studies and results may not be sufficient for regulatory applications, including emergency use or marketing applications, and that additional studies may be required; the risk of market and other conditions and that the Company will not successfully commercialize its products; as well as risks and uncertainties associated with (i) the initiation, timing, progress and results of the Company's research, manufacturing, pre-clinical studies, clinical trials, and other therapeutic candidate development efforts, and the timing of the commercial launch of its commercial products and ones it may acquire or develop in the future; (ii) the Company's ability to advance its therapeutic candidates into clinical trials or to successfully complete its pre-clinical studies or clinical trials or the development of any necessary commercial companion diagnostics; (iii) the extent and number and type of additional studies that the Company may be required to conduct and the Company's receipt of regulatory approvals for its therapeutic candidates, and the timing of other regulatory filings, approvals and feedback; (iv) the manufacturing, clinical development, commercialization, and market acceptance of the Company's therapeutic candidates and Talicia®; (v) the Company's ability to successfully commercialize and promote Talicia®; (vi) the Company's ability to establish and maintain corporate collaborations; (vii) the Company's ability to acquire products approved for marketing in the U.S. that achieve commercial success and build its own marketing and commercialization capabilities; (viii) the interpretation of the properties and characteristics of the Company's therapeutic candidates and the results obtained with its therapeutic candidates in research, pre-clinical studies or clinical trials; (ix) the implementation of the Company's business model, strategic plans for its business and therapeutic candidates; (x) the scope of protection the Company is able to establish and maintain for intellectual property rights covering its therapeutic candidates and its ability to operate its business without infringing the intellectual property rights of others; (xi) parties from whom the Company licenses its intellectual property defaulting in their obligations to the Company; (xii) estimates of the Company's expenses, future revenues, capital requirements and needs for additional financing; (xiii) the effect of patients suffering adverse experiences using investigative drugs under the Company's Expanded Access Program; (xiv) competition from other companies and technologies within the Company's industry; and (xv) the hiring and employment commencement date of executive managers. More detailed information about the Company and the risk factors that may affect the realization of forward-looking statements is set forth in the Company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), including the Company's Annual Report on Form 20-F filed with the SEC on April 10, 2025. All forward-looking statements included in this press release are made only as of the date of this press release. The Company assumes no obligation to update any written or oral forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise unless required by law.
Category: R&D
[1] https://www.cognitivemarketresearch.com/covid-19-therapeutics-market-report[2] A randomized, placebo-controlled pilot study of upamostat, a host-directed serine protease inhibitor, for outpatient treatment of COVID-19 Plasse, Terry F et al. International Journal of Infectious Diseases, Volume 128, 148 – 156.[3] Preliminary data from a recent in vitro study.[4] https://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(22)00638-5/fulltext.[5] Talicia® (omeprazole magnesium, amoxicillin and rifabutin) is indicated for the treatment of H. pylori infection in adults. For full prescribing information see: www.Talicia.com.
Company contact:Adi FrishChief Corporate & Business Development OfficerRedHill Biopharma+972-54-6543-112adi@redhillbio.com
Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1334141/RedHill_Biopharma_Logo.jpg
View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/redhill-biopharma-secures-allowance-of-key-chinese-patent-application-for-proprietary-covid-19-treatment-rhb-107-302439596.html
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Straits Times
an hour ago
- New Straits Times
Manufacturers turn to AI to weather tariff storm
MANUFACTURERS like American lawnmower maker The Toro Company are not panicking at the prospect of United States President Donald Trump's global trade tariffs. Despite five years of dramatic supply disruptions, from the Covid pandemic to today's trade wars, Toro is resisting any temptation to stack its warehouses to the rafters. "We are at probably pre-pandemic inventory levels," said its chief supply-chain manager, Kevin Carpenter, looking relaxed in front of a whiteboard at his office in Minneapolis. "I think everybody will be at a 2019 level." Among US manufacturers, inventories have roller-coasted this year as they rushed to beat Trump's deadlines for tariff hikes, only to see them repeatedly delayed. But how can firms run lean inventories even as tariffs fluctuate, export bans come out of the blue, and conflict rages? One of the answers, they say, is artificial intelligence. Carpenter says he uses AI to digest the daily stream of news that could impact Toro's business, from Trump's social media posts to steel prices, into a custom-made podcast that he listens to each morning. His team also uses generative AI to sieve an ocean of data and to suggest when and how many components to buy from whom. It is a boom industry. Spending on software that includes generative AI for supply chains, capable of learning and even performing tasks on its own, could hit US$55 billion by 2029, up from US$2.7 billion now, according to US research firm Gartner, driven in part by global uncertainties. "The tool just puts up in front of you: 'I think you can take 100 tonnes of this product from this plant to transfer it to that plant.' "And you just hit accept if that makes sense (to you)," McKinsey supply chain consultant Matt Jochim said. The biggest providers of overall supply chain software by revenue are Germany's SAP, US firms Oracle, Coupa and Microsoft and Blue Yonder, a unit of Panasonic, according to Gartner. Generative AI is in its infancy, with most firms still piloting it spending modest amounts, industry experts say. Those investments can climb to tens of millions of dollars when deployed at scale, including the use of tools known as AI agents, which make their own decisions and often need costly upgrades to data management and other IT systems, they said. In commenting for this article, SAP, Oracle, Coupa, Microsoft and Blue Yonder described strong growth for generative AI solutions for supply chains without giving numbers. At US supply chain consultancy GEP, which sells AI tools like this, Trump's tariffs are helping to drive demand. "The tariff volatility has been big," said GEP consultant Mukund Acharya, an expert in retail industry supply chains. SAP said the uncertainty was driving technology take-up. "That's how it was during the financial crisis, Brexit and Covid. And it's what we're seeing now," Richard Howells, SAP vice president and supply chain specialist, said. An AI agent can sift real-time news feeds on changing tariff scenarios, assess contract renewal dates and other data points and come up with a plan of action. But supply chain experts warn of AI hype, saying a lot of money will be wasted on a vain hope that AI can work miracles. "AI is really a powerful enabler for supply chain resilience, but it's not a silver bullet," says Minna Aila, communications chief at Finnish crane-maker Konecranes and member of a business board that advises the OECD on issues including supply chain resilience. Aila said: "I'm still looking forward to the day when AI can predict terrorist attacks at sea, for instance." Konecranes' logistic partners are deploying AI on more mundane data, like weather forecasts. The company makes port cranes that are up to 106m high when assembled. When shipping them, AI marries weather forecasts with data like bridge heights to optimise the route. Toro supply chain chief Carpenter says that without AI, supply chain managers might need to run bigger teams as well. Is he worried that AI is coming for his job one day?


Malaysian Reserve
3 hours ago
- Malaysian Reserve
Siemba Named a Sample Vendor in Three 2025 Gartner® Hype Cycle™ Reports for the Second Year in a Row
ATLANTA, Aug. 16, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Siemba, a leading provider of Penetration Testing as a Service (PTaaS) and Continuous Threat Exposure Management (CTEM), announced today that it has been recognized as a Sample Vendor in the 2025 Gartner® Hype Cycle™ for Application Security, Security Operations, and Everything as a Service (XaaS) reports. This marks the second consecutive year Siemba has been included in all three Hype Cycle reports. Siemba believes this reinforces its growing role in shaping the future of offensive security. The Gartner Hype Cycle reports provide a perspective on the maturity and adoption of emerging technologies. For cybersecurity decision-makers, these reports serve as strategic guides to evaluate which innovations can address real-world risks and drive long-term security improvements. In all three reports, Siemba was identified as a Sample Vendor for Penetration Testing as a Service (PTaaS). Siemba believes that its scalable, platform-driven approach to offensive security will make it easier for organizations to secure their data and assets. 'We are proud to be recognized for the second consecutive year across three Gartner Hype Cycle reports. We believe this is a strong validation of our thesis that continuous validation and visibility are critical to modern cybersecurity,' said Kannan Udayarajan, Founder and CEO of Siemba. 'We're proud that our Full Funnel Offensive Security platform is helping organizations find, prioritize, and remediate risks faster—at the pace of their business.' The 2025 Gartner Hype Cycle for Application Security notes: 'Cybersecurity leaders must take advantage of the underlying trends in the application security space to onboard the most appropriate innovations at the optimal time for their organizational maturity.'(Source: Gartner, Hype Cycle for Application Security, 2025. Dionisio Zumerle, 22 July 2025) Gartner states 'PTaaS enables organizations to elevate their security posture with continuous assessments that integrate validation earlier in the software development life cycle as compared with traditional pentesting efforts. It gives access to real-time findings delivered through a platform, which accelerates remediation and improves collaboration efforts.' Siemba's AI driven platform combines External Attack Surface Mapping, Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST), Automated Vulnerability Assessments, and Penetration Testing as a Service, helping enterprises operationalize CTEM programs at scale. To learn more or download the 2025 Hype Cycle for Security Operations, visit : Gartner Disclaimer Gartner, Hype Cycle for Application Security, 2025, By Dionisio Zumerle, 22 July 2025Gartner, Hype Cycle for Security Operations, 2025, By Jonathan Nunez, Darren Livingstone, 23 June 2025Gartner, Hype Cycle for XaaS, 2025, By Jason Donham, 28 July 2025 GARTNER is a registered trademark and service mark of Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the U.S. and internationally, HYPE CYCLE is a registered trademark of Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates and is used herein with permission. All rights reserved. Gartner does not endorse any vendor, product or service depicted in our research publications and does not advise technology users to select only those vendors with the highest ratings or other designation. Gartner research publications consist of the opinions of Gartner's research organization and should not be construed as statements of fact. Gartner disclaims all warranties, expressed or implied, with respect to this research, including any warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. About Siemba Siemba's outcome-driven Full Funnel Offensive Security model brings together Penetration Testing as a Service (PTaaS), Autonomous DAST (Dynamic Application Security Testing), Vulnerability Assessments, and External Attack Surface Mapping on one unified AI-driven platform. The platform delivers actionable data and insights enabling visibility, speed, scalability, and efficiency in Continuous Threat Exposure Management (CTEM). Enterprises, global systems integrators, government agencies and growing companies leverage Siemba to establish CTEM programs, map assets, launch and schedule autonomous assessments, conduct manual penetration testing and autonomously gather strategic threat and efficiency insights to maximize Return on Mitigation, without requiring extensive hacking knowledge or human intervention. The platform provides one-click security-framework-aligned reports, attack scoring, prioritized lists of findings with suggested remediation actions and attack proofs of concept.


The Star
4 hours ago
- The Star
Vietnamese rice grower helps tackle Cuba's food shortage
Vietnamese rice specialists watch mechanized rice harvesting, in Los Palacios, Pinar del Rio province, Cuba, on May 29, 2025. The Cuban government gave land to a private Vietnamese company for rice production in the face of the lack of local productive varieties and inputs to solve the lack of this cereal on the island. The national average rice yield is 1.6 tons per hectare, and the first fields harvested within this plan had a yield exceeding six tons per hectare. - Photo by Adalberto ROQUE / AFP LOS PALACIOS, Cuba (AFP): Outside Havana, a combine belonging to a private Vietnamese company is harvesting rice, directly farming Cuban land -- in a first -- to help address acute food shortages in the country. The Cuban government has granted Agri VAM, a subsidiary of Vietnam's Fujinuco Group, 1,000 hectares (2,470 acres) of arable land in Los Palacios, 118 kilometers (73 miles) west of the capital. Vietnam has advised Cuba on rice cultivation in the past but this is the first time a private firm has done the farming itself. The government approved the move after a 52 percent plunge in overall agricultural production between 2018 and 2023, according to data from the Center for the Study of the Cuban Economy at the University of Havana. The rice numbers are even worse. Total rice production dropped from 300,000 tons in 2018 to 55,000 tons in 2021, in the depths of the COVID pandemic. The number is slowly recovering, authorities say. Rice is a staple of the local diet, with Cubans consuming 60 kilos (132 pounds) of rice per person per year. Farmers load sun-dried bags of rice onto a truck, in Los Palacios, Pinar del Rio province, Cuba, on May 29, 2025. - AFP Photo - Promising yields and daunting obstacles - During a media visit to its rice fields in May, an Agri VAM representative said the harvest yield to date is seven tons per hectare, "but we want more." That number dwarfs the ton and a half yield-per-hectare of Cuban growers. Vietnam experienced the kind of food shortages that Cuba is going through now, in the 1980s. Today, the Southeast Asian country is the world's third exporter of rice and a valued consultant to other rice-growing nations. "The climate and the temperature are very good for agriculture," but Cuban growers lack necessary farming products such as fertilizers, the Agri VAM representative told reporters. Though Agri VAM can import some materials, it faces other obstacles such as fuel shortages, transportation problems and frozen assets, Cuban economist Omar Everleny Perez and other sources with knowledge of the situation told AFP. Agri VAM and other foreign firms in Cuba may be making profits but "they cannot transfer them abroad because the banks have no liquidity, no foreign currency," Perez said. An independent Cuban media outlet, 14ymedio, recently published excerpts of a letter dated in May, in which Agri VAM asked the Cuban government to unfreeze $300,000 in its account at state-owned International Financing Bank. Vietnam's state press in May quoted deputy agriculture minister Nguyen Quoc Tri asking the government in Havana "to eliminate investment barriers that Vietnamese companies encounter." AFP contacted Agri VAM and Cuban officials but got no response. A truck unloads Vietnamese rice at an industrial dryer, in Los Palacios, Pinar del Rio province, Cuba, on May 29, 2025. - AFP Photo - Foreign investment: badly needed - Cuba is mired in an acute economic crisis and desperately in need of foreign investment. Vietnam and other allies have shown interest. In July, Cuban Prime Minister Manuel Marrero Cruz announced that Havana was taking measures "to energize foreign investment" as he authorized "wholly foreign-owned companies" in the hotel sector. After three years of promises, Russia's deputy prime minister Dmitry Chernyshenko announced in May that Russian businesses want to invest $1 billion in Cuba. Moscow will give them preferential financing rates, he said. But he cautioned that there is "still hard work to be done" and said it is "impossible to achieve things immediately, as if by magic." - AFP