
Support from Harrington Discovery Institute at University Hospitals Helped Advance Heart Attack Drug into Clinical Trials
Positive results of zalunfiban announced at AHA Scientific Sessions
CLEVELAND, Nov. 13, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Promising results from a pivotal Phase 3 clinical trial of an investigational heart-attack drug were announced this week as part of the late-breaking sessions at the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions in New Orleans. The CeleBrate study of zalunfiban (Disaggpro™), from CeleCor Therapeutics, met its efficacy and safety endpoints in the treatment of STEMI (heart attack) patients. This achievement was reached, in part, with support from Harrington Discovery Institute at University Hospitals, a philanthropic organization with a mission to create new medicines for unmet need.
Zalunfiban is a next-generation investigational GPIIb/IIIa inhibitor specifically designed for use by medical first responders and emergency room personnel. It acts on the platelet GPIIb/IIIa receptor to reduce clot formation or re-open the artery. The drug is administered subcutaneously, and its antiplatelet effects wear off in about two hours, to help avoid potential interference with subsequent interventional procedures.
The vast majority of discoveries in academia fail to advance into new therapies. Barry Coller, MD, vice president for medical affairs, David Rockefeller Professor, head of the Allen and Frances Adler Laboratory of Blood and Vascular Biology, and physician-in-chief at The Rockefeller University, and co-founder of CeleCor, was the lead inventor of zalunfiban and needed support to take the investigational drug into clinical testing. Dr. Coller received Harrington's physician-scientist award in 2015, which helped advance the goal of developing and testing zalunfiban in the pre-hospital setting.
Harrington Discovery Institute supports physician-scientists and scientists in advancing discoveries from academic labs into clinical practice by providing advanced drug and business development support, grant funding, and the opportunity to compete for acceleration funds and qualify for investment funds. Since its founding, Harrington has supported 217 drugs-in-the-making, 74 academic institutions, 43 company launches, 23 clinical candidates, and 15 licenses to pharma.
"My therapeutics development advisory team at Harrington Discovery Institute played a crucial role in where we are today," said Dr. Coller. "They offered access to experts in multiple disciplines, which led us to reconsider the route of administration, and initiate much-needed reimbursement strategies. This positioning was instrumental in attracting new funding to advance the medication into clinical trials."
"Harrington Discovery Institute was created to propel promising academic discoveries into medicines for patients," said Jonathan S. Stamler, MD, President and Co-Founder, Harrington Discovery Institute, Distinguished University Professor, Robert S. and Sylvia K. Reitman Family Foundation Chair of Cardiovascular Innovation, and Professor of Medicine and of Biochemistry at University Hospitals and Case Western Reserve University. "Dr. Coller's work is an excellent example of our mission being accomplished. We are privileged to have been able to contribute."
CeleBrate was a pivotal Phase 3 prospective, blinded, randomized, placebo-controlled trial designed to assess the safety and efficacy of a single subcutaneous injection of zalunfiban in STEMI (heart attack) patients in the pre-hospital setting. It enrolled 2,467 patients at 45 sites in the United States, Canada, Mexico, and Europe. Eligible STEMI patients were enrolled in the ambulance or in a hospital emergency department.
More information about the study results can be found here.
SOURCE Harrington Discovery Institute
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