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Biogen and Stoke Therapeutics Announce Publication of Two-Year Natural History Data Demonstrating the Severity of Dravet Syndrome, Including Frequent Seizures and Significant Cognitive and Behavioral Impairments

– Despite treatment with standard-of-care anti-seizure medicines, children with Dravet syndrome experienced high seizure burden and plateaued in

articleBiogen Inc.November 17, 20254/company/biogen-inc/news/biogen-and-stoke-therapeutics-announce-publication-of-two-year-natural-history-data-demonstrating-the-severity-of-dravet-syndrome-including-frequent-seizures-and-significant-cognitive-and-behavioral-impairments
Biogen and Stoke Therapeutics Announce Publication of Two-Year Natural History Data Demonstrating the Severity of Dravet Syndrome, Including Frequent Seizures and Significant Cognitive and Behavioral Impairments

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[{"type":"text","content":"– Despite treatment with standard-of-care anti-seizure medicines, children with Dravet syndrome experienced high seizure burden and plateaued in neurodevelopment, resulting in a widening gap relative to children with typical development – – Findings underscore the urgent need for new medicines that target the underlying genetic cause of Dravet syndrome to improve long-term outcomes – CAMBRIDGE, Mass. and BEDFORD, Mass., Nov. 17, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Biogen Inc. (Nasdaq: BIIB) and Stoke Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: STOK), a biotechnology company dedicated to restoring protein expression by harnessing the body’s potential with RNA medicine, today announced the publication of final data from the BUTTERFLY study, a prospective, two-year natural history study in people with Dravet syndrome. Dravet syndrome is a severe developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE) characterized by recurrent seizures and significant cognitive and behavioral impairments. There are currently no approved disease-modifying medicines to treat Dravet syndrome. The BUTTERFLY study evaluated the impact of Dravet syndrome on adaptive functioning and neurodevelopment over two years in children and adolescents ages 2 to 18 years old. Major motor seizure frequency was evaluated as a secondary outcome measure. In the study, patients were treated with standard-of-care, including anti-seizure medicines (ASMs). Highlights from the research, published November 14, 2025, in Neurology®, 1 the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology, include: Regardless of the age at which patients with Dravet syndrome entered the study, neurodevelopment plateaued at the developmental age of approximately two years old. This created a gap that widened over time versus what would be expected for children with typical development.Results showed that over the course of the two-year study, patients experienced minimal changes in cognition and behavior, including communication, motor skills and personal skills, compared to typical neurodevelopment expected for children of the same age. Assessments of cognition and behavior used in BUTTERFLY were pre-determined endpoints that were incorporated into this natural history study to support use in future clinical studies of Dravet syndrome. They included the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale, Third Edition (Vineland-3); Bayley Scal...

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