Denali Therapeutics Inc. shares have surged 59.4% year to date, outperforming the industry's 5.9% gain, as the company's first FDA approval and a $195 million voucher sale transformed its financial profile.
"Avlayah's accelerated approval validates our TransportVehicle platform's ability to deliver biologics across the blood-brain barrier," Carole Ho, chief medical officer at Denali, said in a statement. The drug, known generically as tividenofusp alfa-eknm, is an enzyme replacement therapy for pediatric patients with Hunter syndrome, or mucopolysaccharidosis type II.
The approval was based on biomarker data showing a 91% reduction in cerebrospinal fluid heparan sulfate levels, a key disease marker. Denali is conducting a global Phase II/III COMPASS study to provide confirmatory clinical data and support worldwide regulatory filings. The company last month agreed to sell the Rare Pediatric Disease Priority Review Voucher tied to the approval, expecting $195 million in gross proceeds.
The approval marks Denali's transition from a clinical-stage biotech to a commercial-stage company, introducing its first revenue-generating product. The company ended the first quarter with about $1.05 billion in cash and investments, providing runway to advance its pipeline of TransportVehicle-enabled therapies for lysosomal storage disorders and neurodegenerative diseases.
Pipeline developments and partnership changes
Denali's clinical pipeline includes DNL126 for Sanfilippo syndrome type A, DNL593 for GRN-related frontotemporal dementia, DNL952 for Pompe disease, and DNL628 for Alzheimer's disease. Early-stage candidates span DNL921 for Alzheimer's, DNL111 for Parkinson's and Gaucher diseases, DNL622 for Hurler syndrome, and DNL422 for Parkinson's.
In April, partner Takeda terminated their collaboration on DNL593 for frontotemporal dementia, returning full rights to Denali. The company said the decision was driven by Takeda's strategic priorities, not safety or efficacy concerns. Separately, Denali and Biogen in May reported disappointing top-line results from a mid-stage study of BIIB122 in early-stage Parkinson's disease, which missed primary and secondary endpoints. The partners discontinued development in idiopathic Parkinson's, though Denali continues a Phase IIa BEACON study in patients with LRRK2 variants.
Financial outlook and valuation
The Zacks consensus estimate for Denali's 2026 loss per share narrowed to $2.77 from $2.90 over the past 60 days, while the 2027 loss estimate narrowed to $2.53 from $2.69. The stock trades at 4.51 times book value, above the industry mean of 3.64 times.
The approval and PRV sale give Denali a stronger balance sheet without requiring an equity raise. Investors will watch the pace of Avlayah's commercial rollout and confirmatory data from the COMPASS study, which will determine whether the accelerated approval converts to full approval. The next catalyst is enrollment updates from the COMPASS trial, which supports global regulatory submissions for tividenofusp alfa-eknm in young adult patients with Hunter syndrome.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.