Exhibit 99.1
NASDAQ: SLGL
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS This presentation contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All statements other than statements of historical facts are forward-looking statements. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terms such as “may,” “will,” “should,” “expect,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “could,” “future,” “outlook,” “intend,” “target,” “project,” “contemplate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “predict,” “potential,” “continue,” or the negative of these terms or other similar expressions, although not all forward-looking statements contain these words. The forward-looking statements in this presentation relate to, among other things, statements regarding the commencement of our planned bioequivalence study for a generic product candidate, our expected date to report top-line data from our pivotal Phase III clinical program for TWIN, our anticipated NDA submission dates for EPSOLAY and TWIN, and estimated sales of our product candidates. These statements are neither promises nor guarantees, but involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other important factors that may cause our actual results, performance, or achievements to be materially different from any future results, performance, or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statement, including but not limited to the following: the fact that we have and expect to continue to incur significant losses; our need for additional funding, which may not be available; our ability to complete the development of our product candidates; our ability to obtain and maintain regulatory approvals for our product candidates in our target markets and the possibility of adverse regulatory or legal actions relating to our product candidates even if regulatory approval is obtained; our ability to commercialize our product candidates; our ability to obtain and maintain adequate protection of our intellectual property; our ability to manufacture our product candidates in commercial quantities, at an adequate quality or at an acceptable cost; our ability to establish adequate sales, marketing, and distribution channels; acceptance of our product candidates by healthcare professionals and patients; the possibility that we may face third-party claims of intellectual property infringement; the timing and results of clinical trials that we may conduct or that our competitors and others may conduct relating to our or their products; intense competition in our industry, with competitors having substantially greater financial, technological, research and development, regulatory and clinical, manufacturing, marketing, and sales, distribution and personnel resources than we do; potential product liability claims; potential adverse federal, state, and local government regulation in the United States, Europe, or Israel; and loss or retirement of key executives and research scientists. These and other important factors discussed in the Company's Annual Report on Form 20-F filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) on March 21, 2019, and our other reports filed with the SEC could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated by the forward-looking statements made in this presentation. Any such forward-looking statements represent management’s estimates as of the date of this presentation. While we may elect to update such forward-looking statements at some point in the future, unless required by applicable law, we disclaim any obligation to do so, even if subsequent events cause our views to change. Thus, one should not assume that our silence over time means that actual events are bearing out as expressed or implied in such forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as representing our views as of any date subsequent to the date of this presentation. This presentation contains trademarks, trade names, and service marks of other companies, which are the property of their respective owners. We do not intend our use or display of other parties' trademarks, trade names, or service marks to imply, and such use or display should not be construed to imply, a relationship with, or endorsement or sponsorship of us by, these other parties.
THREE-FOLD STRATEGY Leverage our capabilities to generate significant non-dilutive funding Identify targeted opportunities in other areas of high unmet need where we can bring innovation and exceed current standard-of-care treatments Successfully commercialize best-in-class dermatology brands in acne and rosacea, and maintain a leadership position in these indications
NOVEL DELIVERY SYSTEMFOR BEST-IN-CLASS TOPICAL DRUGS Proprietarysilica-based microencapsulation topical delivery platform for dermatology indications Positive phase III results from EPSOLAY® clinical trial in papulopustular rosacea in July 2019NDA submission anticipated in 1H/2020 TWYNEO® phase III data in acne vulgaris expected in Q4/2019NDA submission anticipated in 2H/2020 Completed follow-on offering of $11.5 million in August 2019Successfully raised $86.3 million in IPO in February 2018 Non-dilutive revenues of $18.8 million from generic pipeline in the first 9 months Seasoned management team with proven track record and broad dermatologic experience 1 2 3 4 5 6
Pipelines & upcoming milestones BRANDED CANDIDATES EPSOLAY®Papulopustular rosacea TWYNEO®Acne vulgaris Research/Preclinical Proof of Concept Phase I Phase II Phase III 1H/2020 2H/2020 Top-lineresultsin Q4/2019 GENERIC PRODUCTS/CANDIDATES Ivermectin cream, 1%(RLD: Soolantra®) Acyclovir cream, 5%(RLD: Zovirax®) 5-Fluorouracil cream, 5%(RLD: Efudex®) TENTATIVE APPROVAL AS OF JANUARY 29, 2018 APPROVAL & SALES AS OF FEBRUARY 2019 BIOEQUIVALENCE ACHIEVED IN DEC 2019 Research Filed Bioequivalence SGT-210Palmoplantar keratoderma NDA Submission RLD, reference listed drug.
WHY SILICA? FDA approved for topical useProprietary process produces high encapsulation efficiencyPhysical properties of silica shell tuned to modify release of active ingredientSmooth, no-grit feel for userStrong IP protection to 2032 (EPSOLAY®) and 2038 (TWYNEO®) 1 Silica monomers and drug substance are emulsified together Silica monomers migrate to the oil/water interface in a well-controlled process A silica shell, microcapsuleis formed SOL-GEL PROCESS 2 Barrier between entrapped API and skin may reduce irritation and improve complianceAPIs stabilized via microencapsulation, allowing for novel combinationsHurdle for generics to demonstrate similar release profileIf approved, will be first core-shell encapsulation system for topical dermatology products POTENTIAL BENEFITS 3 Foundation forbranded product pipeline
CRYO-SEM PICTURE ENERGY-DISPERSIVE X-RAY SPECTROSCOPY MAPPING Encapsulated Benzoyl Peroxide (E-BPO) Skin lipids migrate through the silica shell to promote solubilization of BPO. Dissolved BPO then migrates to skin’s sebaceous follicles Silica shell wraps BPO crystals and serves as a barrier between BPO crystals and skin, leading to less irritation Controlled release improves tolerability
Patents and Trademarks # of Patents Related to Company Products 5 11 34 15 4 in US, IL, CA, EP EPSOLAY® 5 in US, CA, EP, IL TWYNEO® US Patents Granted/Allowed Pending Foreign Patents Granted/Allowed Pending Trademarks Registered/Allowed Registered/Allowed Our intellectual property is protected through a series of patent families, describing and claiming our proprietary processes, formulations, and methods of use IP, Expiry Product/Indication IP Protection for Our Branded Products (US) Granted 2038Pending 2040 Granted 2032Pending 2040 TWYNEO®acne vulgaris EPSOLAY®subtype II rosacea Intellectual property estate
Encapsulation aims to reduce irritation of BPOPotential to be more effective than existing treatmentsPotential to be first FDA-approved single-agent BPO Rx drug product Chronic, inflammatory condition that primarily affects the face and is often characterized by flushing, redness, inflamed bumps, and pustules Topical antimicrobials (metronidazole, clindamycin); topical anti-mite (ivermectin); systemic antibiotics (minocycline, doxycycline) Insufficient efficacy resulting in poor adherence, contributing to antibiotic resistance; systemic side effects What ispapulopustular rosacea? How is it treated? What are the current treatment shortfalls? Papulopustular rosacea Inflammatory condition with poor adherence to current treatments Our solution: EPSOLAY®Encapsulated benzoyl peroxide (E-BPO)
Male and female ≥18 years of age Clinical diagnosis of moderate to severe rosacea≥15 to ≤70 inflammatory lesions≤2 nodules 2:1 EPSOLAY® cream, 5% (once daily) Vehicle cream (once daily) 54 Total SitesStudy 54-01: 361Study 54-02: 372 12 weeks of treatment Baseline 2 4 8 12 Weeks Inclusion criteria Two phase III, double-blind, randomized, vehicle-controlled studies EPSOLAY® Study design PRIMARY ENDPOINTS:Proportion of patients with the primary measure of success, "Clear" (0) or "Almost clear" (1), in the Investigator GlobalAssessment (IGA) relative to baseline at Week 12Absolute mean change in inflammatory lesion counts from baseline to Week 12 Randomization
STUDY POPULATIONS & DISCONTINUATION Study 54-02 Study 54-01 Percent of patients EPSOLAY® Vehicle Randomized (n=243), Safety (n=239),Per Protocol (n=190) Randomized (n=118), Safety (n=113),Per Protocol (n=93) Randomized (n=250), Safety (n=249),Per Protocol (n=235) Percent of patients Randomized (n=122), Safety (n=120),Per Protocol (n=113) Intent-to-treat population.
Patient severity at baseline Study 54-01 Characteristic EPSOLAY® Vehicle IGA “Moderate”IGA “Severe” 210 (86.4%)33 (13.6%) 104 (88.1%)14 (11.9%) Mean lesion count (SD)Median lesion count (range) 25.7 (11.07)22.0 (15-69) 26.3 (12.45)21.0 (15-70) Study 54-02 EPSOLAY® Vehicle 227 (90.8%)23 (9.2%) 112 (91.8%)10 (8.2%) 29.8 (14.00)25.0 (15-70) 27.5 (13.04)22.5 (15-70)
Primary endpoints (itt) Study 54-02 Study 54-01 P<0.001 P<0.001 Success in IGA at Week 12 Inflammatory Lesion Count Change From Baseline at Week 12 P<0.001 P<0.001 Study 54-02 Study 54-01 ITT, intent-to-treat.
Secondary endpoint (itt) Inflammatory Lesion Percent Change From Baseline to Week 12 P<0.001 P<0.001 Study 54-02 Study 54-01
Success in iga (itt) Week 2Exploratory Endpoint P=0.009 P=0.017 Study 54-02 Study 54-01 Week 4Secondary Endpoint P<0.001 P=0.009 Study 54-02 Study 54-01 Week 8Secondary Endpoint P<0.001 P=0.006 Study 54-02 Study 54-01
Inflammatory lesion Count Change from Baseline (itt) Study 54-02 Study 54-01 P<0.001 P<0.001 Week 2Exploratory Endpoint Week 4Secondary Endpoint Week 8Secondary Endpoint Study 54-02 Study 54-01 P<0.001 P<0.001 Study 54-02 Study 54-01 P<0.001 P<0.001
Comparison of Onset of action tohistorical soolantra® results* Rapid Onset of EPSOLAY® *Sol-Gel did not conduct a head-to-head comparison trial or study. The results described above are for illustrative purposes only and should not be construedas conclusions to be drawn as if we conducted a head-to-head comparison trial or study.
Baseline Characteristics of Active Arm IGA Severe 33 23 82 113 26 65 0 51 71 52 48 Moderate 210 227 369 346 172 418 557 444 443 67 77 Mild 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 17 Inflammatory Lesions 25.7 29.8 31.0 33.3 21.6 21.7 18.3 28.5 30.0 19.5 20.5 Inflammatory Lesions–Mean Percent Change From Baseline Success in IGA Difference From Vehicle FMX103 Minocycline foam, 1.5% 10-week study EPSOLAY® Oral administration 16-week study Side-by-side with other historicaltrial results* *Sol-Gel did not conduct a head-to-head comparison trial or study. The results described above are for illustrative purposes only and should not be construedas conclusions to be drawn as if we conducted a head-to-head comparison trial or study. 12-week study 12-week study 12-week study 12-week study
SKIN TOLERABILITY Safety population. Dryness Scaling Burning/Stinging Itching Percent Reporting Any (%) Study 54-01 Percent Reporting Any (%) Study 54-02 Dryness Scaling Burning/Stinging Itching
Study 54-01 Study 54-02 TEAEs, n (%) EPSOLAY®(n=239) Vehicle(n=113) EPSOLAY®(n=249) Vehicle (n=120) Any TEAE 49 (20.5%) 17 (15.0%) 50 (20.2%) 22 (18.2%) Serious TEAE 0 1 (0.4%)* 1 (0.4%)† 0 Severe TEAE 2 (0.8%) 0 2 (0.8%)‡ 0 Discontinuation 5 (2.1%) 1 (0.9%) 4 (1.6%) 1 (0.8%)§ Treatment-related 14 (5.9%) 3 (2.7%) 9 (3.6%) 0 *Femur fracture.†Spinal compression fracture.‡One subject with spinal compression fracture.§Urinary tract infection—Discontinuation classified as “other reason.” Safety population. Treatment-emergent adverse events(TEAEs) summary
A multifactorial disease of the pilosebaceous unit, involving abnormalities in sebum production, follicular epithelial desquamation, bacterial proliferation, and inflammation Topical BPO, retinoids, antibiotics, and their combinations; isotretinoin and antibiotics are mainstays of systemic therapy Insufficient efficacy negatively affects self-esteem; contributes to antibiotic resistance; systemic side effects What isacne vulgaris? How is it treated? What are the current treatment shortfalls? Acne vulgaris Multifactorial disease requiring powerful combination treatments Our solution: TWYNEO®E-BPO + E-ATRA Cream Encapsulation allows combining 2 highly effective APIs, BPO and ATRA, that have complementary mechanisms of actionEncapsulation may reduce the irritation of both BPO and ATRAPotential to be more effective than existing topical treatments
Number of Patients Severe 0 0 1 0 Moderate 102 111 1,043 1,118 Mild 0 0 0 0 Average Baseline # of Lesions Inflamed 25.9 ~29.7 28.8 29.6 Non-inflamed 42.1 ~53.7 46.9 46.7 Non-Inflammatory Lesions—Mean Percent Change From Baseline at Week 12 Success in IGA at Week 12 Inflammatory Lesions—Mean Percent Change From Baseline at Week 12 Difference From Vehicle Phase II Phase II Phase II TWYNEO® Active Treatment Arm *Sol-Gel did not conduct a head-to-head comparison trial or study. The results described above are for illustrative purposes only and should not be construed as conclusions to be drawn as if we conducted a head-to-head comparison trial or study. Acne trials efficacy results*: moderate patients
Number of Patients Severe 14 61 64 37 118 70 79 Moderate 102 292 305 296 620 413 440 Mild 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Average Baseline # of Lesions Inflamed 26.7 42.4 42.9 31.6 30.7 29.7 30.3 Non-inflamed 42.9 59.1 62.8 50.5 49.7 42.4 42.3 Non-Inflammatory Lesions—Mean Percent Change From Baseline at Week 12 Success in IGA at Week 12 Inflammatory Lesions—Mean Percent Change From Baseline at Week 12 Active Treatment Arm Difference From Vehicle Winlevi™ FMX101 Minocycline foam, 4% Clascoterone cream, 1% Oral sarecycline Seysara™ Noninflammatory lesions not a co-primary endpoint Phase II Phase II Phase II Noninflammatory lesions not in label TWYNEO® *Sol-Gel did not conduct a head-to-head comparison trial or study. The results described above are for illustrative purposes only and should not be construed as conclusions to be drawn as if we conducted a head-to-head comparison trial or study. Efficacy results of recent acne trials*
Week 12 Week 6 0 2:1 Randomization Screening E-BPO + E-ATRA vs Topical Vehicle Placebo-Controlled Two 12-week, randomized, double-blind, vehicle-controlled studies in patients with acne vulgarisEnrollment of ~420 subjects per study at a ratio of 2:1, yielding 99% powering PRIMARY ENDPOINTS: Proportion of patients in active treatment vs vehicle cream with an assessment of clear or almost clear with at least a 2-grade improvement in IGA at Week 12Absolute change from baseline in inflammatory and non-inflammatory lesion count at Week 12 TOPLINE RESULTS EXPECTED IN Q4/2019 TWYNEO® phase III trial designs Male and female patients ≥9 years of ageIGA score of moderate or severeA diagnosis of facial acne ≥30 and ≤150 non-inflammatory lesions ≥20 and ≤100 inflammatory lesions including on the nose
ROSACEA ACNE Approximately 16 million people in the US suffer from rosacea; 5-6 million have type 2 (age >30 years)~$800 million branded topical market (WAC)1Treated with topical products 76% of the time1Dermatologists account for 80% of treatmentsMany patients are misdiagnosed or do not seek treatment at all, creating a large underserved patient population Market potential for acne & rosacea 1. Symphony Health. Syneos Research & Insights ”Treatment Answers”; June 2019 MAT. 50 million people suffer from acne in the US(ages 12-24 years)~$1.9 billion branded topical market (WAC)1 Treated with topicals 56% of the time;remaining is oral1Dermatologists account for ~60% of acne treatments(higher for branded products)Combining treatments is the bestway to combat acne for the majority of patients2 2. American Academy of Dermatology. https://www.aad.org/practicecenter/quality/clinical-guidelines/acne/topical-therapies..
EPSOLAY® Advanced technology platform Trusted API Topical creamNon-systemicAntibiotic-freeComplimentary mechanism Potential to advance rosacea treatment Demonstrated strong efficacy Demonstrated fast onset of action Observed favorable tolerability profile
DENSITY &PRODUCTIVITY METRICS MARKET FACTORS APPROACH TO building a commercialorganization—Efficient and effectivE PRESCRIBER VALUE ~12,000 Dermatologists ~6,500 Decile3-10 ~6,000 NP/PAs FlexibleScalableHighly efficient SALES FORCE 3,280 target offices~45-62 sales representatives
COMPETITIVE PRICING Addressing access & UM for epsolay®1-3 ~70% Most would cover at preferred or non-preferred level dependingon cost PAYER RESPONSE TO CLINICAL PROFILE LIKELY:Step-through genericsQuantity limits POSSIBLE:Prior authorizationto label “If priced like Finacea, it would get parity access; 15%-20% rebate expected with WAC at parity to Finacea.” State AIS Health, 2019. http://www.aishealth.com/about.MMIT Network, 2019. http://www.mmitnetwork.com.Data on file. NPG Health primary market research, 2019. PAYER UM POSITION BASED ON HIGHERNET-TO-PLAN PRICE COMPELLING TO DRIVE FORMULARY CONSIDERATION COVERED OR BETTER3:92% Commercial40% Part D74% Medicaid Based on~107 MILLION LIVES1 Positive payer response to EPSOLAY®—Competitive pricing likelyequals parity access in rosacea
In January 2018, Perrigo received tentative approval from the FDA for ivermectin cream,1%, developed in collaboration with Sol-Gel. Perrigo was second to file and, as of today,there is no public disclosure of a third filer to the FDA. In February 2019, Perrigo received approval from the FDA and launched the sale of acyclovir cream,5%, developed in collaboration with Sol-Gel. An authorized generic product entered the market in the third quarter of 2019. In December 2019, bioequivalence and superiority to vehicle was achieved for generic 5-fluorouracil cream, 5%, for actinic keratosis. An abbreviated New Drug Application expected to be filed in the U.S. in 2020. A portfolio of generic product candidates with favorable commercial agreementsthat supplement our branded pipelineSeven collaborations with Perrigo and 1 with Douglas Pharmaceuticalswith 50/50 gross profit sharing FDA Approvals Recent Developments Multiple Collaborations Revenue-generating generics partnerships
Financial profile Gross proceeds of $86.3 million raised in IPO of 7,187,500 ordinary shares on February 5, 2018Gross proceeds of $11.5 million raised in a public follow-on offering on August 12, 201920,387,468 shares outstanding as ofSeptember 30, 2019$57.7 million of cash and investmentsas of September 30, 2019$18.8 million in generic product revenue in the first 9 months of 2019 Cash resources will enable funding of operational and capital expenditure requirements into the first quarter of 2021
2021 File NDA for EPSOLAY® in 1H/2020 File NDA for TWYENO® in 2H/2020 2019 2020 Obtained ANDA approval for acyclovir cream (collaboration with Perrigo) Reported positive phase III results for EPSOLAY® in papulopustular rosacea Plans to report phase III results for TWYNEO® in acne vulgaris at end of 2019 Bioequivalence achieved for 5-fluorouracil cream, 5% Recent milestones & next steps US pre-launch commercial preparations File ANDA for 5-fluorouracil cream, 5% in 2H/2020 (collaboration with Douglas) Approval and launch of EPSOLAY® US commercial organization fully operational TWYNEO® granted market protection out to 2038 Approval and launch of TWYNEO® following EPSOLAY® Recognized non-dilutive revenues early from launch of acyclovir cream (by Perrigo) Start PoC for palmoplantar keratoderma Q4/2019
NASDAQ: SLGLwww.sol-gel.com ©2019 Sol-Gel Technologies Ltd. All Rights Reserved. EPSOLAY® is a registered trademark of Sol-Gel Technologies Ltd. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.