Eccogene Enrols First Patient In Phase 2a MOSAIC Trial For MASH Therapies

18 December 2025 | Thursday | News


Study evaluates differentiated oral small molecules targeting metabolic and inflammatory pathways in a complex liver disease
Image Source : Public Domain

Image Source : Public Domain

Eccogene, a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing next-generation oral small molecule therapeutics for chronic cardiometabolic and inflammatory conditions, today announced that the first patient has been enrolled in MOSAIC, the company’s Phase 2a clinical trial evaluating ECC4703, ECC0509 and their combination in adults with MRI-based or clinically defined metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH). The MOSAIC trial is designed to evaluate two differentiated mechanisms, THR-β agonism and SSAO inhibition, and to determine whether each monotherapy provides meaningful metabolic or inflammatory benefit.

“Enrolling the first patient in MOSAIC represents an important milestone for our clinical pipeline,” said Jingye Zhou, Chief Executive Officer of Eccogene. “This study supports our broader strategy to advance differentiated, next-generation oral therapies aimed at meaningfully reducing the global burden of cardiometabolic diseases.”

The initiation of the MOSAIC Phase 2a program follows the U.S. FDA clearance of Eccogene’s Investigational New Drug (IND) application. MOSAIC is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 2a trial assessing the efficacy, safety, and pharmacodynamic effects of ECC4703, ECC0509, and the combination of both agents over 12 weeks of treatment in adults with clinically defined MASH. The study will enroll approximately 160 participants, with change in liver fat content assessed by MRI-PDFF as the primary endpoint.

“MASH is a complex disease with metabolic, inflammatory and fibrotic components, and effective treatment will likely require addressing more than one pathway,” said Dr. Rohit Loomba, Chief, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University of California at San Diego. “ECC4703 and ECC0509 offer two distinct mechanisms, and MOSAIC will evaluate their individual contributions and whether their complementary biology may provide added benefit.”

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