Corcept Therapeutics Announces Fourth Quarter, Full-Year 2020 Preliminary Selected Financial Results and 2021 Revenue Guidance; Provides Corporate Update

On February 8, 2021 Corcept Therapeutics Incorporated (NASDAQ: CORT), a commercial-stage company engaged in the discovery and development of drugs to treat severe metabolic, oncologic and neuropsychiatric disorders by modulating the effects of the stress hormone cortisol, reported preliminary fourth quarter revenue of $85.7 million, compared to $87.9 million in the fourth quarter of 2019 (Press release, Corcept Therapeutics, FEB 8, 2021, https://ir.corcept.com/news-releases/news-release-details/corcept-therapeutics-announces-fourth-quarter-full-year-2020 [SID1234574731]). Preliminary 2020 revenue was $353.9 million compared to $306.5 million in 2019. The company expects 2021 revenue of $375 – 405 million.

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Cash and investments increased by $32.7 million in the fourth quarter to $476.9 million. At December 31, 2019 cash and investments totaled $315.3 million. The company spent $9.7 million in the fourth quarter repurchasing 458,769 shares of common stock pursuant to its stock repurchase program. Under the currently authorized terms of that program, $190.3 million remains available for the repurchase of shares.

These results are prior to completion of the company’s annual independent audit and are subject to adjustment.

"Corcept’s performance during the COVID-19 pandemic demonstrates the durability of our business," said Joseph K. Belanoff, MD, Corcept’s Chief Executive Officer. "Confronted with unprecedented obstacles, we generated significantly more revenue, more income and more cash than we did in 2019. Having won an important legal victory in our dispute with Teva Pharmaceuticals, we look with confidence to the future. As the pandemic is contained, we expect our commercial growth to resume and have provided 2021 revenue guidance of $375 – 405 million.

"The pandemic’s impact on our clinical activities has been variable. Trials in acutely life-threatening indications, such as advanced ovarian and pancreatic cancer, recruited briskly. Studies of illnesses with a slower course of disease, such as Cushing’s syndrome, castration-resistant prostate cancer ("CRPC"), anti-psychotic-induced weight gain ("AIWG") and non-alcoholic steatohepatitus ("NASH") have proceeded more slowly.

"Despite these challenges, our development team made important advances. They maintained our existing trials, although the pandemic significantly slowed enrollment in many of them. They also started new trials that greatly broadened the scope of our clinical program. In 2020, we initiated trials in Cushing’s syndrome of adrenal origin, metastatic pancreatic cancer, advanced adrenocortical cancer, AIWG and NASH. We also laid the groundwork for further expansion by advancing promising compounds from our portfolio of selective cortisol modulators towards the clinic."

Cushing’s Syndrome

Phase 3 GRACE trial of relacorilant as a treatment for patients with any etiology of
Cushing’s syndrome continues at sites in the United States, Canada, Europe and Israel;
pandemic conditions delay expected timing of NDA submission
Enrollment continues in Phase 3 GRADIENT trial of relacorilant as a treatment for patients with Cushing’s syndrome of adrenal origin, with sites planned in the United States, Europe and Israel
"While our Phase 3 GRACE and GRADIENT trials in patients with Cushing’s syndrome continue to accrue patients and generate valuable data, pandemic-related public health measures, which in many places became even more restrictive in the fourth quarter, continue to slow the pace of enrollment," said Andreas Grauer, MD, Corcept’s Chief Medical Officer. "As vaccination campaigns falter – especially in Europe, where many of our most productive clinical sites are located – the retarding effects of the pandemic remain in place. Ultimately, relacorilant’s NDA submission date will depend on the duration and severity of pandemic-related restrictions, which cannot be known with certainty. The delay may be as long as one year, to the second quarter of 2023.

"These delays are especially frustrating because relacorilant’s Phase 2 data were extremely promising. Our team of clinical investigators are enthusiastic. We are confident enrollments will accelerate once conditions improve."

Solid Tumors

Preliminary results in 178-patient, controlled, Phase 2 trial of relacorilant plus nab-paclitaxel
in patients with metastatic ovarian cancer expected in first half 2021
Preliminary results in first 40 patients enrolled in open-label Phase 3 RELIANT trial
of relacorilant plus nab-paclitaxel in patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer expected
in first half 2021
Selection of optimum dose of exicorilant plus enzalutamide in patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer ("CRPC") expected by third quarter 2021
Patient selection underway in 20-patient, open-label, Phase 1b trial of relacorilant plus PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor pembrolizumab in patients with adrenal cancer with cortisol excess
"Our trials in patients with metastatic ovarian and pancreatic cancer are on track to generate preliminary data in the first half of 2021, as planned," said Dr. Grauer. "These trials are evaluating whether relacorilant can enhance the efficacy of nab-paclitaxel by reducing cortisol’s suppression of apoptosis in patients with advanced disease, many of whom have experienced progression on prior rounds of taxane-based therapies. It would be wonderful to be able to offer a therapy that benefits them.

"The dose-finding trial of our selective cortisol modulator exicorilant with enzalutamide as a treatment for CRPC continues to enroll patients," said Dr. Grauer, "although the pandemic has slowed its pace, pushing selection of an optimum dose to the second or third quarter of this year, depending on how quickly pandemic conditions improve. Our hypothesis, which is well-supported by pre-clinical data, is that combining an androgen receptor antagonist like enzalutamide with a cortisol modulator will block an important tumor escape route.

"Last year, we initiated a Phase 1b trial in patients with adrenal cancer with cortisol excess," said Dr. Grauer. "This study will evaluate whether adding relacorilant to pembrolizumab therapy will reduce cortisol-activated immune suppression sufficiently to help pembrolizumab achieve its intended tumor-killing effect, while relacorilant treats the Cushing’s syndrome caused by excess cortisol activity."

Metabolic Diseases

Enrollment underway in double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 2 trial of miricorilant
in patients with NASH
Enrollment continues in GRATITUDE, a double-blind, placebo-controlled, Phase 2 trial
of miricorilant to reverse recent AIWG
Enrollment continues in GRATITUDE II, a 150-patient, double-blind, placebo-controlled
Phase 2 trial of miricorilant to reverse long-standing AIWG
"In the fourth quarter, we initiated a double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 2 trial of miricorilant as a potential treatment for NASH, a serious liver disorder that affects millions of people," said Dr. Grauer. "We plan to enroll 120 patients, who will receive either 900 mg miricorilant, 600 mg miricorilant or placebo for twelve weeks. The primary endpoint will be reduction in liver fat content, as measured by MRI. Our pre-clinical data suggest miricorilant may be a potent treatment for NASH. We hope to demonstrate similarly encouraging results in patients.

"Our Phase 2 trials in AIWG – GRATITUDE and GRATITUDE II – continue to enroll patients, although the pandemic has slowed the pace," added Dr. Grauer. "AIWG reduces the quality of life and shortens the life expectancy of millions of patients. Results from the Phase 1b trial we completed last year suggest that miricorilant may benefit them. In that study, healthy volunteers given miricorilant plus olanzapine gained less weight and had lower triglycerides and less sharply elevated liver enzymes than those who received olanzapine plus placebo after only two weeks of dosing. These results build on those we achieved in similar trials using mifepristone (see Gross et al, Advances in Therapy (2009); Gross et al, Obesity (2010). Miricorilant, like mifepristone, modulates cortisol activity. Unlike mifepristone, miricorilant does not affect progesterone activity."

Conference Call

We will hold a conference call on February 8, 2021, at 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time (2:00 p.m. Pacific Time). To participate, click this link (listen-only mode) or dial 1-833-693-0540 (United States) or 1-661-407-1581 (international) approximately ten minutes before the start of the call. The conference ID number is 9289307. A replay will be available on the Investors / Past Events tab of our website.

Hypercortisolism

Hypercortisolism, often referred to as Cushing’s syndrome, is caused by excessive activity of the hormone cortisol. Endogenous Cushing’s syndrome is an orphan disease that most often affects adults aged 20-50. In the United States, an estimated 20,000 patients have Cushing’s syndrome, with about 3,000 new patients diagnosed each year. Symptoms vary, but most patients experience one or more of the following manifestations: high blood sugar, diabetes, high blood pressure, upper-body obesity, rounded face, increased fat around the neck, thinning arms and legs, severe fatigue and weak muscles. Irritability, anxiety, cognitive disturbances and depression are also common. Hypercortisolism can affect every organ system in the body and can be lethal if not treated effectively.