Jonas Dyhrfjeld-Johnsen has joined the Acousia Therapeutics management team in the newly established role of Chief Development Officer, accordign to report by B3C Newswire. Having worked in various translational R&D positions in the hearing loss and CNS area for more than ten years, Dyhrfjeld-Johnsen will be further strengthening Acousia`s scientific and technical expertise.
Acousia Therapeutics strengthens R&D management team
CEO Tim Bölke said: “I am extremely pleased to welcome Jonas onboard at Acousia Therapeutics. Hearing loss is a serious condition of growing epidemic scale and enormous unmet clinical need. Effective drug therapies for preventing and treating the different forms of sensorineural hearing loss are therefore desperately anticipated by patients. With our advanced, innovative drug candidate portfolio we are optimally positioned to help patients overcome their debilitating condition in the not too distant future.“
Dyhrfjeld-Johnsen added: “I am very excited about the opportunity to join Acousia Therapeutics and help drive the development of the drug pipeline forward. Patients suffering from hearing loss and the related consequences need effective treatment options to enhance their daily quality of life and stay connected to the people surrounding them. It is a pleasure to join an experienced management team dedicated to delivering such options.”
Acousia Therapeutics GmbH has made significant progress in bringing its innovative lead hearing loss compound ACOU 085 towards the clinic. Whilst the start of the ACOU 085 phase 1 study in patients with age-related hearing loss is imminent, next generation compounds are being thoroughly tested at the same time in a broad range of preclinical test batteries. To guide the ACOU 085 clinical program activities, Acousia had recently established its clinical-scientific advisory board which includes Prof. Dr. Christoph Arnoldner (Vienna), Prof. Dr. Serena Preyer (Karlsruhe), Prof. Dr. Pascal Senn (Geneva), and Acousia co-founder Prof. Dr. Hubert Löwenheim (Tübingen).