Acoramidis
Acoramidis, sold under the brand name Attruby, is a medication used for the treatment of cardiomyopathy. It is a near-complete transthyretin stabilizer, developed to mimic the protective properties of the naturally occurring T119M mutation, to treat transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy. It is taken by mouth.
The most common adverse reactions include diarrhea and upper abdominal pain.
Acoramidis was approved for medical use in the United States in November 2024, and in the European Union in February 2025.
Medical uses
Acoramidis is indicated for the treatment of the cardiomyopathy of wild-type or variant transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis in adults to reduce cardiovascular death and cardiovascular-related hospitalization.Side effects
The most common side effects are diarrhea and abdominal pain.History
The efficacy and safety of acoramidis were evaluated in a multicenter, international, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study in 611 adult participants with wild-type or hereditary ATTR-CM.Clinical trials
Phase I data indicated acoramidis achieved near-complete TTR stabilization across the entire dosing interval at steady state.Phase II and the Open-Label Extension data indicated after a median of 38 months, long-term treatment with acoramidis was generally well tolerated and resulted in a median decline in NT-proBNP levels, normalization of serum TTR, and sustained stabilization of TTR in individuals with ATTR-CM.
Phase III data from indicated acoramidis resulted in a significantly better four-step primary hierarchical outcome containing components of mortality, morbidity, and function than placebo at 30 months in participants with ATTR-CM. Adverse events were similar in the two groups.
Other analyses from ATTRibute-CM indicated a 50% reduction in cumulative cardiovascular hospitalizations, a 42% reduction in all-cause mortality and recurrent CVH, and a 3-month time-to-separation of the Kaplan Meier curves for ACM or CVH. No other treatment has demonstrated this degree of treatment effect this quickly in participants with ATTR-CM.
In vitro data indicated acoramidis exhibits near-complete TTR stabilization at therapeutic trough concentrations, and its TTR stabilization exceeds that of tafamidis' across a range of destabilizing TTR mutations.
Society and culture
Legal status
Acoramidis was approved for medical use in the United States in November 2024. The approval was granted to BridgeBio Pharma.In December 2024, the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use of the European Medicines Agency adopted a positive opinion, recommending the granting of a marketing authorization for the medicinal product Beyonttra, intended for the treatment of transthyretin amyloidosis in adults with cardiomyopathy. The applicant for this medicinal product is BridgeBio Europe B.V. Acoramidis was designated an orphan medicine by the EMA. Acoramidis was authorized for medical use in the European Union in February 2025.
Names
During development, acoramidis was known as AG10.Acoramidis is the international nonproprietary name.
Acoramidis is sold under the brand names Attruby and Beyonttra.