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Investors Presentation A leading gene therapy biotechnology company www.gensight-biologics.com A leading gene therapy biotechnology company Today’s speakers Thomas Gidoin Jean-Philippe Combal Bernard Gilly Chief Executive Officer Chief Financial Officer Chief Operating Officer • PIXIUM VISION (Since 2011) Chairman of the Board, Founder • GALDERMA INTERNATIONAL (2011-2014) • DBV TECHNOLOGIES (2012-2015) - VP Finance • FOVEA PHARMA (2005-2009) Chairman & CEO - sold to Sanofi • SANOFI (2010-2011) VP, Strategic Marketing Ophthalmic Division • • SOFINNOVA PARTNERS (2000-2005) Managing Partner • FOVEA (2006-2011) VP, Director of Development IPSEN (2008-2011) – UK Operations Controller (London) Senior Financial Analyst (Paris) • ERNST & YOUNG (2007-2008) - Auditor • TRANSGENE (1992-2000) Chairman & • Pharm.D and Ph.D. • Ph.D. in biology and bio-economics CEO SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 3 GenSight: two disruptive proprietary gene therapy technology platforms Innovative gene therapy approaches for severe retinal degenerative pathologies leading to blindness as well as diseases of the central nervous system MTS GS010: ongoing Phase III for lead product candidate dedicated to Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON) 2 DISRUPTIVE TECHNOLOGY PLATFORMS FOR 2 PRODUCTS Well positioned to advance disruptive gene therapy technologies in ophthalmology to commercialization SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential OPTOGENETICS GS030: second lead product candidate targeting photoreceptor degenerative diseases (RP/AMD) Page 4 Advanced solutions for severe ophthalmologic diseases 2012 2013 2014 2015 GS010 - LHON CORPORATE CLINICAL PRECLINICAL 2016 2017 2018 FIRST SALES Phase III start CLINICAL GS030 - RP / AMD PRECLINICAL Creation Series A: c. €20m March 2013 Series B: c. €32m July 2015 CLINICAL IPO: c. €45m July 2016 Euronext Paris Ticker: SIGHT First lead product candidate GS010 two years away from BLA submission SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 5 Disruptive gene therapy approaches for severe retinal degenerative pathologies leading to blindness Degenerative retinal diseases • The eye transforms light into electric signals • Photoreceptor cells are responsible for this conversion • Electric signals are sent to the visual cortex of the brain via the ganglion cells forming the optic nerve RETINITIS PIGMENTOSA (RP) GEOGRAPHIC ATROPHY (Late stage form of Age-Related Degeneration AMD) LEBER’S HEREDITARY OPTIC NEUROPATHY (LHON) Degeneration of retinal ganglion cells Degeneration of PRs Targeting 3 types of uncured diseases : LHON and RP/AMD Source: Company SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 7 Gene therapy approach to treat vision loss due to retinal disease 1 Genetic disorders or aging are responsible for retinal degenerative diseases that lead to blindness. Therapeutic gene is packaged in a virus vector (AAV) 2 AAV which contains the therapeutic gene is injected into the eye (intravitreal or subretinal) 3 AAV vector enters retinal cells where it expresses a therapeutic protein, that enables the retina to regain lost function Source: Company SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 8 Advantages of gene therapy in ophthalmology THE EYE: STRATEGIC TARGET • • • • No approved curative treatments for retinal degenerative diseases Immune privilege, closed system Easy access Long-term expression of transduced gene due to low turnover rate of retinal cells AAV SUCCESSFUL FOR RETINA • Proven safety and proof of effect in humans NO OTHER APPROVED THERAPEUTIC APPROACHES • Genetic replacement therapy for diseases caused by single gene mutations (LHON) • Efficient transduction of retinal cells • Validated manufacturing process • In-situ insertion of therapeutic gene to stimulate sight in patients with severe vision loss due to multiple causes, such as RP and AMD Source: Company SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 9 OPTOGENETICS MTS PLATFORM GenSight: solid and advanced product portfolio in ophthalmic gene therapy RESEARCH PRECL. PHASE I/II PHASE III LAUNCH Status Product Technology Indication GS010 MTS LHON ND4 GS011 MTS LHON ND1 Undisclosed mitochondrial target MTS Undisclosed GS030 Optogenetics RP GLP toxicity trials Q3 2016 GS030 Optogenetics AMD Enter into Phase I/II with a delay of 8-12 months following RP (Geographic Atrophy) FDA & EMA Orphan Drug designation Phase III trials (RESCUE and REVERSE) ongoing Initiate regulatory preclinical studies as soon as GS010 clinical data are received Leveraging two high potential technology platforms in several indications SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 10 Ongoing Phase III for our lead product candidate dedicated to Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON): GS010 LHON: neuro-degenerative mitochondrial disease characterized by sudden loss of sight Evolution of vision from onset ONSET 3M 6M Retinal nerve fiber layer thickness average change 12M 30 20 10 2nd EYE 0 Blindness occurs sequentially within 12 months of onset -10 -20 -30 TIME Image source: illustrated from Newamn NJ et al., Am J Ophthalmom. 141(6), 1061-1067,2006 Incidence 0.15/100,000 Prevalence 1/31k-40k Blindness 15-35y -40 -50 % change vs. baseline VISION 1st EYE PRE-ONSET ONSET 3M 6M 9M Image source: illustrated from Barboni et al Natural History of Leber’s Hereditary Optic Neuropathy: An OCT Study TIME • Orphan maternally inherited mitochondrial disease • Painless sudden loss of central vision in the 1st eye with 2nd eye sequentially impaired: symmetric disease with poor functional visual recovery • 97% of patients have bilateral involvement <1 year / 25% of cases are simultaneous • Targets ND4 which accounts for ~75% of LHON in North America & Europe SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 12 GenSight’s proprietary gene sequencing encapsulated in AAV 1 Transduction of retinal cell with replacement mitochondrial gene 2 Transcription of replacement mitochondrial gene in the nucleus 3 Delivery of replacement gene mRNA to polysomes located at the mitochondrial surface 4 Synthesis, translocation and proper localization of replacement mitochondrial protein The only technology that permits missing mitochondrial proteins to be shuttled into the mitochondrion to restore energy production SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 13 Phase I/II efficacy results at week 48: very promising data (1/4) Study design Results • First-in-man, dose-escalation safety study, single center, Paris XV-XX • Four dose levels : 9E9; 3E10; 9E10 and 1.8E11 vg/eye = 4 cohorts ; one additional cohort at MTD (9E10 ; n=3) Excellent systemic safety • Each dose tested in three patients, at least 4w delay between patient 1 & 2 • Decision to increase the dose taken by a DSMB Mostly mild, well tolerated, ocular side effects that are responsive to standard therapy • Chronic LHON ND4 patients with <20/200 Typical immune responses • Single intra-vitreal injection in the worst affected eye No dose-related toxicity The primary objectives were successfully met: GS010 appears to be well tolerated with a good safety profile Source: Company SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 14 Phase I/II efficacy results at week 48: very promising data (2/4) ETDRS letters (LogMAR) visual acuity change from baseline to week 48 Treated Eye (TE) LogMAR Untreated Fellow Eye (UTE) LogMAR Outcomes in visual acuity TE vs UTE (LogMAR) Patients with ≤ 2y disease duration (n=5)* +30 letters (-0.59) +13 letters (-0.25) +17 letters Patients with > 2y disease duration (n=7) - 4 letters (0.08) -3 letters (0.06) (-0.338) No difference Trends of Improved Visual Acuity Note (*): excluding as per phase III inclusion criteria with Hand Motion SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 15 Phase I/II efficacy results at week 48: very promising data (3/4) Mean change from Baseline Week 0 Week 24 Week 36 Illustration of visual benefit for patient SHAM Week 48 GS010 30 Patients <2 years treated Patients <2 years untreated Patients >2 years treated Patients >2 years untreated 10 4 3 0 1 Week 0 17 +11 letters +17 letters 13 Week 36 6 -3 -5 -6 -4 Sustained and increased improvement over time in visual acuity for treated eyes in patients with less than 2 years from onset Week 48 Source: Company SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 16 Phase I/II efficacy results at week 48: very promising data (4/4) Symptom duration impacts magnitude of treatment effect — VA beneficial trends at week 48 in patients ≤ 2y symptom duration — Color vision beneficial trends at week 48 in patients with ≤ 2y symptom duration, confirmed with subjective outcome from patients Baseline vision status at treatment impacts magnitude of treatment effect — Observed in visual field & color vision tests Analysis supports protocol strategy for phase III — Population divided by time from onset — Effect analyzed on better seeing eye “Now I can see if a traffic light is red or green. In the subway, I can read the names of stations with large letters. I have better autonomy” « Phase 1 Patient » Strong Phase I/II results trends that validate Phase III design SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 17 Two ongoing Phase III trials: time based strategy One eye of each patient randomized to GS010 or sham Right Eye Group #1 Right Eye Group #2 Primary Comparison: eyes receiving GS010 vs. eyes receiving sham GS010 sham sham Design RESCUE Onset of disease: ≤ 6 months REVERSE Onset of disease: 6 months to ≤ 1 year • Initiation: Q4 2015 • 36 patients in each • Randomized (one eye treated vs. sham), double-masked, shamcontrolled, multi-center • 21 patients injected as of June 21, 2016 GS010 Primary outcome at 48 weeks • Mean Difference in ETDRS/ compared to eyes receiving SHAM treatment Secondary outcome at 48 weeks • Measure vision gain, vision stabilization, or reduction in vision decline • Best or worst eyes vs. sham • Responders analysis: — Gain from baseline of 15 or more ETDRS letters OR — Snellen acuity >20/200 Source: Company SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 18 Numerous development milestones for GS010 through Phase I/II 48W data IND Phase I/II 72W data Phase I/II 96W data US SIV CTA Q4 2015 FPFV PHASE III 2017 2016 RESCUE REVERSE LPFV LPFV LPLV RESCUE REVERSE LPLV RESCUE REVERSE 48W DATA START IND: Investigational New Drug CTA: Clinical Trial Application US SIV: US Secondary Investigation 2018 FPFV: First Patient First Visit LPFV: Last Patient First Visit LPLV: Last Patient Last Visit BLA Submission Expected Approval Initiation of Asian Strategic Partnership Objective: obtain the marketing authorization for GS010 within 24 months An accelerated path to market SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 19 Second lead product candidate targeting photoreceptor degenerative diseases (RP/AMD): GS030 RP / AMD: degenerative diseases of photoreceptors leading to blindness Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP) • • • Blinding genetic disease with multiple mutations (+100 genes) Sequential photoreceptor degeneration Slow & irreversible evolution leading to blindness Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD) • • • — — • Incidence 15K-20K / year Prevalence 350K-400K (1.5 M worldwide) Blindness Occurence 40-45 years old Onset of AMD: 55 to 60 years of age Early form: dry-AMD that evolves with aging to late AMD Late AMD can either be: Neovascular form (wet-AMD) Geographic atrophy Prevalence of geographic atrophy increases with age from 3.5% over 75 years to 22% over 90 years Incidence of AMD 350k - 400k / year Prevalence of Late AMD 1.47% with 0.81% geographic atrophy in at least one eye Blindness Occurrence from Late AMD 250 000 with geographic atrophy accounting from 10 to 20% of blind patients Source: Company SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 21 Optogenetics: gene therapy with photosensitive protein Transferring a gene encoding lightsensitive protein to retinal ganglion cells to restore photoreceptor function in cells that are still wired to the visual cortex Restore photoreceptor function in cells SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 22 GS030: stimulating the eye with light through gene therapy 1 3 2 AAV2.7m8 + + ChrimsonR Gene therapy transfer of light sensitive protein Expression in retinal cells Stimulation with optoelectronic device External visual interface transforms external light stimuli into signal that activates the transduced retinal cells Source: Company SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 23 GS030: activation and stimulation of photoreceptors GS030 proof of concept in non-human primates at 2 months post-injection 1. GS030 injected intravitreally in normal primates 2. Retina is isolated at week 8 and placed on multielectrode array 3. Retinal ganglion cells are stimulated with red light at 600 nm 4. Firing of RGCs is measured in response to different light levels whilst photoreceptor signaling is chemically blocked 5. GS030-engineered RGCs fire in response to light Bilateral IVT administration with 5x1011 VG/eye (in 100 µL) * Partial data; experiments still ongoing Solid results to enter into clinical phase I in 2017 SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 24 No adverse effect associated with GS030 in non-human primates Bilateral IVT administration with 5x1011 VG/eye (in 100 µL) Ophthalmology examinations (n=8 or 4 eyes) • • Normal in all animals at 2 months (n=8 eyes) Normal in all animals at 3 & 6 months (n=4 eyes) Histopathology (n=2 eyes/ timepoint) • Eye tissues: no ocular inflammation • Other tissues: no histological findings Retina structural modifications (n=2 eyes/ timepoint) • No apparent structural modifications of the retina (layer thickness and structures) No retinal cell degeneration or necrosis • • Very mild increase in humoral immune response (NAb) in serum at 2 months, none at 6 months • No NAb in aqueous humor from both eyes at 2 & 6 months GS030 expression does not lead to retinal inflammation nor pathological modifications of the retina Source: Company SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 25 Key development milestones for GS030 Initiation of Pivotal Trials 2016 ODD 2017 SA EMA CTA 2018 PreIDE Early data from Phase I/II Patients GMP like Batches GLP Regulatory Tox Study in Monkeys 2019 48 w data from Phase I/II Initiation of Phase I/II in RP Patients subject to tox results ODD: Orphan Drug Designation CTA: Clinical Trial Application EMA: European Medicines Agency IDE: Investigational Device Exemption SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 26 Building a high strategic value Curing blindness represents major market opportunity Geographical Split - Blind people in major markets 285m people visually impaired North America 3.2m Europe 3.0m Asia 16m 39m totally blind Blindness 6M BLIND PEOPLE IN NORTH AMERICA AND EU RP and AMD are the main causes of blindness in Europe and in the US Total blindness costs exceed tens of billions of USD per annum No curative treatment exists for blind patients Source: WHO, IAPB-VISION2020, NORC-Univ. of Chicago / The Economic Burden of Vision Loss and Eye Disorders in the United States, 2014 SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 28 Favorable reimbursement conditions Gene therapy in ophthalmology for rare diseases could be considered similar to organ transplants for payers Blindness represents a high burden to health systems (direct medical costs and long term care) Increasing pressure from patients and patients associations due to the absence of curative treatments SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 29 Pricing and prevalence: organ transplant / gene therapy Orphan Therapy Annual Cost per Patient ($) $600 000 Transplant cost per patient to 180 days $1 500 000 INTESTINE $550 000 $1 350 000 CARBAGLU $500 000 HEART $450 000 $1 200 000 ELAPRASE $400 000 $1 050 000 CINRYSZ LUNG SOLIRIS ORFADIN NAGLAZYME $350 000 $300 000 ARCALYST $250 000 ALLOGENEIC BONE MARROW $200 000 $150 000 $750 000 MYOZYME ALDURAZYME FABRAZYME PANCREAS $600 000 LIVER CEREZYME AUTOLOGOUS BONE MARROW REMODULIN ZAVESCA $100 000 $900 000 $450 000 KIDNEY $300 000 ILARIS KUVAN $150 000 TRACLEER $50 000 $0 $0 0 2 000 4 000 6 000 8 000 10 000 12 000 Addressable market (patients) 14 000 16 000 Transplant 18 000 Drug Orphan therapies and transplants: a relevant pricing benchmark Source: Nature Biotechnology, Volume 33, Number 9, September 2015: The payers’ perspective on gene therapy SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 30 Potential applications of GenSight technology platforms Current focus Potential applications MTS PLATFORM Other LHON NARP Leigh Syndrome Dominant Optic Atrophy Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Parkinson’s LHON RP AMD OPTOGENETICS PLATFORM SENSORIAL NON-SENSORIAL Dry-AMD Vagus Nerve Stimulation Congenital Deafness Rare Diseases Ability to leverage technology platforms and significant expertise to expand the pipeline in ophthalmology and other neurodegenerative disorders SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 31 Appendix Strong support from eminent Key Opinion Leaders Alfredo Sadun, M.D., Ph.D. Doheny Eye Institute, University of California, Los Angeles Patrick Yu-Wai-Man, M.D., Ph.D., FRCOpth Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London Pr. José-Alain Sahel, M.D., Ph.D. Nancy J Newman, M.D. Vision Institute, Paris Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia Pr. Ernst Bamberg, Ph.D. Pr. Jean Bennett, M.D., Ph.D. F. M. Kirby Center for Molecular Ophthalmology, University Of Pennsylvania School Of Medicine Center for Cellular and Molecular Therapeutics, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) University of Frankfurt, Germany Max Planck Institute of Biophysics, Frankfurt Thomas Klopstock, M.D. Department of Neurology, University of Munich, Friedrich-Baur-Institute, Munich Dr. Luk H. Vandenberghe, Ph.D. Ocular Genomics Institute, Harvard Medical School Mark Moster, M.D. Wills Eye Hospital, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia Pr. Connie Cepko, Ph.D. Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Dr. Botond Roska, M.D., Ph.D. University of Basel Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research Valerio Carelli, M.D., Ph.D. Istituto delle Scienze Neurologiche di Bologna, Ospedale Bellaria, Bologna Clinical investigators Members of the Scientific Advisory Board / Founders Page 33 Manufacturing agreements with top tier players GS030 GS030 GS010 GS010 • Transient triple transfection • Transient triple transfection • Baculovirus production • Preclinical and clinical trials products • Clinical trials and commercial products • • QA documentation • • Quality control tests performed at different steps of production process to assess product strength, quality, purity and safety Full QA & QC documentation with EMA/FDA GMP qualification capabilities for commercial purpose Non-clinical safety evaluation, clinical trials and potentially commercial products • Full GMP compliance • FDA inspected SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential • Extensive experience for commercial QA structure and agencies’ inspection management Page 34 Our MTS Sequence enhances growth and ATP synthesis in LHON Fibroblasts Survival rate on galactose Rate of ATP synthesis on galactose 100% 100% 8% 14% LHON + MTS1 12.7% 56% LHON + MTS1 & MTS2 54.3% 84% Fibroblasts Control LHON (mutated ND4) Both MTS1 and MTS2 sequences are necessary for an efficient transfer of the mitochondrial protein From patent WO 2006/117250 A2 SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 35 GS010 / GS030: IP and market exclusivity timelines Products Components Licenses Associated IP Patent Term GS010 Mitochondrial Targeting Sequence Worldwide exclusive license in ophthalmology MTS/3’UTR mitochondrial trafficking IP 2026 + PTE/SPC *of 5 years Non exclusive license outside of ophthalmology ORPHAN STATUS - MARKET EXCLUSIVITY EU: 10 YEARS + 2 YEARS FOR PEDIATRIC US: 7 YEARS IN THE US + 6 MONTHS FOR PEDIATRIC Light Sensitive Protein Worldwide exclusive license in ophthalmology and nonexclusive license outside of ophthalmology ChrimsonR IP 2032 + PTE/SPC* of 5 years Engineered AAV Worldwide exclusive license in Optogenetics Vector AAV2 7m8 IP 2032 GS030 ORPHAN STATUS - MARKET EXCLUSIVITY EU: 10 YEARS + 2 YEARS FOR PEDIATRIC US: 7 YEARS IN THE US + 6 MONTHS FOR PEDIATRIC Note: *Patent Term Extension/Supplementary Protection Certificate SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 36 2015 Financial Statements – P&L In million euros (IFRS) 31/12/2014 31/12/2015 Operating income 1.1 3.6 Research & Development (6.2) (10.7) General & Administration (1.6) (6.5) (1) Operating income (loss) (6.7) (13.7) Financial income (loss) 0.1 0.0 Net income (loss) (6.7) (13.7) Excluding non-recurring items (6.7) (10.7) (1) Note (1): 3.0m of NASDAQ IPO related costs expensed in 2015 SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 37 2015 Financial Statements – Balance Sheet In million euros (IFRS) 31/12/2014 31/12/2015 Non-current assets 0.5 1.2 Cash and cash equivalents 10.7 30.1 Short term investments 1.4 - Other current assets 2.2 5.0 TOTAL ASSETS 14.8 36.3 Shareholders’ equity 10.6 29.3 Non-current liabilities 0.7 0.7 Current liabilities 3.6 6.3 Total liabilities 4.2 7.0 TOTAL LIABILITIES & SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY 14.8 36.3 SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 38 2015 Financial Statements – Cash Flow Statement In million euros (IFRS) 31/12/2014 31/12/2015 Net cash flows from operating activities (5.5) (12.1) Net cash flows from investment activities (1.6) 0.6 Net cash flows from financing activities 0.7 30.9 (1) (Decrease)/Increase in cash and cash equivalents (6.4) 19.4 CLOSING CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS 10.7 30.1 Note (1): Mainly €30.8m net proceeds from our Series B in July 2015 SEPT 2016 │ Non Confidential Page 39