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NYRADA INC (NYR) - Inside Nyrada’s Bid to Protect the Brain and Heart After Attack

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Manage episode 509681925 series 3570035
Content provided by Andrew Musgrave. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andrew Musgrave or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

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A blocked artery isn’t the end of the story—what happens when blood rushes back can decide how much tissue survives. We sit down with Nyrada CEO James Bonner to unpack how Xolatryp, a small molecule TRPC channel blocker, aims to protect mitochondria, cut calcium overload, and reduce injury after heart attack, traumatic brain injury, and stroke. With Phase I safety in the bank and a Phase IIA study planned for PCI patients, we dig into the practical metrics that matter: MRI‑based infarct size, blood biomarkers, heart function, and arrhythmia rates.
James explains why mitochondrial stability is the hinge point in ischemia‑reperfusion injury and how preclinical work with the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research supports Xolatryp’s mechanism. We talk through the study design choices that bring the drug into the cath lab at the right moment, the potential to standardize dosing alongside angioplasty, and the broader clinical logic that could translate across cardiology and neurology. The conversation also explores Nyrada’s IP moat with a composition‑of‑matter patent, the company’s lean, virtual operating model, and a funding plan combining new equity and R&D rebates to carry the program through Phase IIA.
If you care about where the next leap in acute care may come from, this is a grounded look at a therapy built for minutes‑matter medicine. We share Nyrada’s two‑to‑three‑year outlook, including a licensing‑by‑indication strategy across key markets, and frame the market size anchored by roughly two million annual PCI procedures in developed regions. Subscribe for more ASX‑focused biotech briefings, share this with a colleague who tracks cardiovascular or neuro trauma innovations, and leave a review to tell us which endpoints you believe should define success.

  continue reading

Chapters

1. NYRADA INC (NYR) - Inside Nyrada’s Bid to Protect the Brain and Heart After Attack (00:00:00)

2. Meet Nyrada and Xolatryp (00:00:04)

3. Phase IIa Trial Goals and Measures (00:01:10)

4. Why Mitochondria Protection Matters (00:03:10)

5. IP Moat and Funding Runway (00:04:19)

6. Market Size and Indication Strategy (00:05:52)

7. Outlook, Licensing Plan, Closing (00:07:03)

171 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 509681925 series 3570035
Content provided by Andrew Musgrave. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andrew Musgrave or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Send us a text

A blocked artery isn’t the end of the story—what happens when blood rushes back can decide how much tissue survives. We sit down with Nyrada CEO James Bonner to unpack how Xolatryp, a small molecule TRPC channel blocker, aims to protect mitochondria, cut calcium overload, and reduce injury after heart attack, traumatic brain injury, and stroke. With Phase I safety in the bank and a Phase IIA study planned for PCI patients, we dig into the practical metrics that matter: MRI‑based infarct size, blood biomarkers, heart function, and arrhythmia rates.
James explains why mitochondrial stability is the hinge point in ischemia‑reperfusion injury and how preclinical work with the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research supports Xolatryp’s mechanism. We talk through the study design choices that bring the drug into the cath lab at the right moment, the potential to standardize dosing alongside angioplasty, and the broader clinical logic that could translate across cardiology and neurology. The conversation also explores Nyrada’s IP moat with a composition‑of‑matter patent, the company’s lean, virtual operating model, and a funding plan combining new equity and R&D rebates to carry the program through Phase IIA.
If you care about where the next leap in acute care may come from, this is a grounded look at a therapy built for minutes‑matter medicine. We share Nyrada’s two‑to‑three‑year outlook, including a licensing‑by‑indication strategy across key markets, and frame the market size anchored by roughly two million annual PCI procedures in developed regions. Subscribe for more ASX‑focused biotech briefings, share this with a colleague who tracks cardiovascular or neuro trauma innovations, and leave a review to tell us which endpoints you believe should define success.

  continue reading

Chapters

1. NYRADA INC (NYR) - Inside Nyrada’s Bid to Protect the Brain and Heart After Attack (00:00:00)

2. Meet Nyrada and Xolatryp (00:00:04)

3. Phase IIa Trial Goals and Measures (00:01:10)

4. Why Mitochondria Protection Matters (00:03:10)

5. IP Moat and Funding Runway (00:04:19)

6. Market Size and Indication Strategy (00:05:52)

7. Outlook, Licensing Plan, Closing (00:07:03)

171 episodes

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