UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

FORM 8-K

 

CURRENT REPORT

Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

 

Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported): February 16, 2017

 

AMICUS THERAPEUTICS, INC.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

 

Delaware

 

001-33497

 

71-0869350

(State or other Jurisdiction of Incorporation)

 

(Commission File Number)

 

(IRS Employer Identification No.)

 

1 Cedar Brook Drive, Cranbury, NJ

 

08512

(Address of Principal Executive Offices)

 

(Zip Code)

 

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (609) 662-2000

 

 

(Former name or former address if changed since last report.)

 

Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:

 

o Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)

 

o Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)

 

o Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))

 

o Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))

 

 

 



 

Item 8.01. Other Events.

 

The senior management of Amicus Therapeutics, Inc. (the “Company”) is using the presentations attached as Exhibit 99.1 and Exhibit 99.2 to this Current Report in its current meetings with investors and analysts.

 

Item 9.01. Financial Statements and Exhibits.

 

(d) Exhibits:  The Exhibit Index annexed hereto is incorporated herein by reference.

 

Exhibit
No.

 

Description

99.1

 

Presentation Materials — Corporate Overview (February 2017)

99.2

 

Presentation Materials — Pompe Disease: A New Understanding and A New Approach (February 2017) 

 

2



 

SIGNATURES

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.

 

 

 

AMICUS THERAPEUTICS, INC.

 

 

 

Date: February 16, 2017

By:

/s/ ELLEN S. ROSENBERG

 

Name:

Ellen S. Rosenberg

 

Title:

General Counsel and Corporate Secretary

 

3


Exhibit 99.1

Corporate Overview February 2017

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Safe Harbor This presentation contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 relating to preclinical and clinical development of our product candidates, the timing and reporting of results from preclinical studies and clinical trials, the prospects and timing of the potential regulatory approval of our product candidates, commercialization plans, financing plans, and the projected cash position for the Company. In particular, this presentation relates to the preliminary data from a global Phase 1/2 study (ATB200-02) to investigate ATB200/AT2221. The inclusion of forward-looking statements arising from this preliminary data and study should not be regarded as a representation by us that any of our plans will be achieved. Any or all of the forward-looking statements in this presentation may turn out to be wrong and can be affected by inaccurate assumptions we might make or by known or unknown risks and uncertainties. For example, with respect to statements regarding the goals, progress, timing, and outcomes of discussions with regulatory authorities, and in particular the potential goals, progress, timing, and results of preclinical studies and clinical trials, actual results may differ materially from those set forth in this release due to the risks and uncertainties inherent in our business, including, without limitation: the potential that results of clinical or preclinical studies indicate that the product candidates are unsafe or ineffective; the potential that it may be difficult to enroll patients in our clinical trials; the potential that regulatory authorities, including the FDA, EMA, and PMDA, may not grant or may delay approval for our product candidates; the potential that we may not be successful in commercializing Galafold in Europe or our other product candidates if and when approved; the potential that preclinical and clinical studies could be delayed because we identify serious side effects or other safety issues; and the potential that we will need additional funding to complete all of our studies. Further, the results of earlier preclinical studies and/or clinical trials may not be predictive of future results. The preliminary data and Phase 1/2 study discussed herein is inherently preliminary and early in the study, derived from a limited patient set, and later trial results with this patient set or others may not be consistent with these preliminary results. With respect to statements regarding projections of our cash position, actual results may differ based on market factors and our ability to execute operational and budget plans. In addition, all forward-looking statements are subject to other risks detailed in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015 and Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2016. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date hereof. All forward-looking statements are qualified in their entirety by this cautionary statement, and we undertake no obligation to revise or update this presentation to reflect events or circumstances after the date hereof. Introduction

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Building a Top Global Biotech in Devastating Rare Diseases Introduction FIRST ORAL PRECISION MEDICINE FOR FABRY DISEASE WORLD CLASS SCIENCE & DRUG DEVELOPMENT ATB200/AT2221 NOVEL TREATMENT PARADIGM FOR POMPE IN PHASE 1/2 $331M CASH BALANCE Two Phase 3 PROGRAMS (FABRY & EB) 1 BREAKTHROUGH THERAPY DESIGNATION TREATING PATIENTS IN 24 COUNTRIES 3 PROGRAMS IN CLINIC IN 3 RARE DISEASES $3B+ MARKET OPPORTUNITY FOR CURRENT PIPELINE PROTEIN ENGINEERING & GLYCOBIOLOGY

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Pompe Phase 1/2 data cascade Pompe end of Phase 2 meeting Runway into 2H18 Meaningful revenue contribution from Galafold EB Phase 3 data Galafold international launch continues Japan NDA submission Fabry GI study initiation 2016 Key Accomplishments in 2016 Introduction Positive preliminary data in Phase 1/2 study in Pompe patients $331M in cash (12/31/16) Phase 3 enrollment near complete EU approval International launch success Regulatory progress Pompe Disease (ATB200/AT2221) Strong Balance Sheet Epidermolysis Bullosa (EB) (SD-101) Fabry Disease (Galafold™)

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2017 Key Strategic Priorities Introduction We Remain Sharply Focused on FIVE Key Strategic Priorities as We Continue to Build a Top Global Biotechnology Company Focused on Rare Devastating Diseases Advance International Galafold Launch Submit Japanese New Drug Application (J-NDA) for Migalastat Establish Definitive Proof of Concept for ATB200/AT2221 with Clear Path to Registration for Pompe Disease Successfully Complete Phase 3 EB Study Maintain Financial Strength

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Our Vision – Maximizing Impact on Patients to Drive Shareholder Value Introduction 6 2010 2014 2018 Today 2023 ~5,000 Patients* ~800 Patients* ~250 Patients* ~90 Patients ~37 Patients The Ultimate Measure of Our Success Will be the Number of Patients with Devastating Rare Diseases Treated with an Amicus Product = 20 patients *Clinical & Commercial

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Galafold™ (Migalastat) Precision Medicine for Fabry Disease Continue Launch Execution and Geographic Expansion

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Fabry Disease Overview Galafold: Precision Medicine for Fabry Disease 8 Fabry Disease is a Fatal Genetic Disorder that Affects Multiple Organ Systems Leading Causes of Death Life-Limiting Symptoms TRANSIENT ISCHEMIC ATTACK (TIA) & STROKE1 KIDNEY DISEASE3 Protein in the urine Decreased kidney function Kidney failure HEART DISEASE2 Irregular heartbeat (fast or slow) Heart attack or heart failure Enlarged heart GASTROINTESTINAL3 Nausea, vomiting, cramping, and diarrhea Pain/bloating after eating, feeling full Constipation Difficulty managing weight Deficiency of α-Gal A enzyme leading to GL-3 accumulation >900 known mutations 5-10K diagnosed WW (51% female/49% male4) Newborn screening studies suggest prevalence of ~1:1000 to ~1:4000 Key Facts 1. Desnick R, et al. Ann Intern Med. 2003 2. Yousef Z, et al. Eur Heart J. 2013 3. Germain D. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2010 4. Fabry Registry 2011

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Precision Medicine Driven by a Patient’s Genotype Amicus Therapeutics is Committed to Innovative R&D to Develop the Highest Quality Therapies for ALL Fabry Patients Galafold: Precision Medicine for Fabry Disease Amenable (35-50% of patients) Non-Amenable Growing to ~$2B Global Fabry market ~$1.2B Global Fabry market today Amenable Non-Amenable Oral precision medicine Future Vision Novel ERT co-formulated with migalastat Today Migalastat *Artist rendering, not actual product image

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Full EU Approval as First Oral Precision Medicine for Fabry Disease Galafold Indicated for Long-Term Treatment of Adults and Adolescents Aged ≥ 16 years with a Confirmed Diagnosis of Fabry Disease and Who have an Amenable Mutation3 Galafold: Precision Medicine for Fabry Disease FIRST oral precision medicine for Fabry disease FIRST searchable, electronic pharmacogenetic label Established efficacy from 2 pivotal studies (ERT-switch & naïve patients)1,2,3 Label expanded from 269 to include 313 amenable mutations Strong safety profile, most common side effect reported in clinical trials was headache FIRST new treatment option for Fabry in more than a decade Approved May 30, 2016 Launch exceeding expectations Germain, DP et al., New England Journal of Medicine. 2. Hughes, et al., Journal of Medical Genetics. 3. For important safety information for Galafold visit www.ema.europa.eu.

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Galafold Commercial Opportunity Galafold: Precision Medicine for Fabry Disease Prioritizing EU, Japan, and Other Large Fabry Markets to Address Patients with Amenable Mutations (35%-50% of Fabry Population) 5k-10k Diagnosed WW (40-50% of Diagnosed Patients Not on ERT Today) Market Continues to Grow > 10% / Year U.S. 27% EU 34% ROW 26% Japan 13% ERT-Treated Diagnosed Untreated Undiagnosed 5k-10k Patients Diagnosed WW 40%-50% of Diagnosed Patients not on ERT Newborn Screening Studies Suggest Prevalence of ~1:1000 to ~1:40001 amenable mutations = Geographic Segments Patient Segments 1. Burton, LDN WORLD Symposium, 2012 Feb. Mechtler et al., The Lancet, 2011 Dec. Hwu et al., Hum Mutation, 2009 Jun. Spada et al., Am J Human Genet., 2006 Jul

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Early Success with International Launch (as of 12/31/16) Initial Launch Success Driven by Germany with ERT-Switch & Naïve Patients, Reimbursement Now Available in 6 Countries* Galafold: Precision Medicine for Fabry Disease Patients (Switch & Naïve) on reimbursed Galafold (12/31/16) 61 Countries with pricing discussions ongoing 18 Countries with available reimbursement* 6 Countries with Amicus footprint 22 *Commercial and Expanded Access Programs (EAPs) Target Number of Patients on Reimbursed Galafold by YE17 300

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German Launch Update (as of 12/31/16) Galafold: Precision Medicine for Fabry Disease Germany is an Important Indicator for EU Launch Success *Market share assumptions based on estimated number of ERT-treated patients with amenable mutations in Germany as of May 2016 IMPORTANT EARLY INDICATORS IN GERMANY Vast majority switch patients ~25% of eligible switch patients now on Galafold* All newly experienced patients & physicians Majority of switches from Replagal™ Male / female mix 13 unique prescribers Galafold ~25% ERT ~75% Current Approximate Market Share*

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EU Launch Strategy INITIAL FOCUS ON TOP 5 COUNTRIES Germany France, Italy, Spain, UK ~2,000 Fabry patients treated ~70-75% of EU market value ~25% of global Fabry market Focus on EU Top 5 Plus Key Mid-Sized EU Markets in 2017 Galafold: Precision Medicine for Fabry Disease INVEST IN KEY MID-SIZED EU COUNTRIES AND SELECT EAP OPPORTUNITIES Austria, Nordics (4), Netherlands, Belgium, etc. ~10% of EU market value Selectively invest in key EAP markets

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Global Regulatory Strategy to Reach More Patients Galafold: Precision Medicine for Fabry Disease EU Approval and Launch (May 30, 2016) Active Expanded Access Programs (EAP) in 2 Territories with More Initiated EU Approval is Gateway to ~75% of Global ERT Market 6 Additional Regulatory Submissions Complete, Process Initiated in Other Key Geographies U.S. Full Approval Pathway Defined by Amicus Japanese NDA Targeted 1H17 1 Additional Approval (Switzerland)

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Amicus Proprietary Fabry ERT Novel Proprietary Fabry ERT Building on Biologics Capabilities and CHART™ Platform to Develop Differentiated Novel ERT Development status: Cell line transferred to manufacturer Preclinical data update in 2017 Fabry ERT Target Product Profile: Improved drug targeting to key tissues Significantly more potent dose delivery Co-formulation with chaperone to enhance stability Dosing flexibility

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ATB200 Novel ERT for Pompe Disease Establishing Human Proof of Concept and Validating Biologics Platform in 2017

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Pompe Disease Overview Devastating Disease Symptoms Persist Across a Broad Spectrum of Patients Despite Available Therapy Pompe Disease Deficiency of GAA leading to glycogen accumulation Age of onset ranges from infancy to adulthood Symptoms include muscle weakness, respiratory failure, and cardiomyopathy Respiratory and cardiac failure are leading causes of morbidity and mortality 5,000 – 10,000 patients diagnosed WW1 ~$800M+ Global Pompe ERT sales in FY152 1. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NIH). 2. Sanofi Press Release & 10-K

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Pompe Disease: A Complex Disease with Significant Unmet Needs We’ve Made Great Strides and Expect to Address Key Remaining Questions in 2017 Novel ERT for Pompe Disease – ATB200 + Chaperone preclinical clinical Enhanced levels of M6P Optimized glycosylation Improved in vitro cellular uptake Enhanced ERT activity & stability Greater ERT uptake into muscle in Pompe KO mice Greater glycogen reduction in Pompe KO mice Desired PK profile & half-life Safety in ERT-switch Early biomarkers of muscle repair Excellent tolerability Muscle disease-causing biology Improved clinical outcomes? Superior functional outcomes vs SOC in Pompe KO mouse key question

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Novel Pompe Treatment Paradigm with Three Key Differentiators Novel ERT for Pompe Disease – ATB200 + Chaperone Chaperone addition Optimized mixture of glycans ATB200 + Chaperone: A Highly Differentiated Approach ATB200 (Novel ERT) High levels of M6P and bis M6P *Artist rendering, not actual product image

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Substrate Clearance & Cellular Physiology ATB200/AT2221 Preclinical Data Summary 1. Following 2 doses of 20mg/kg alglucosidase alfa or ATB200 + AT2221 in Gaa KO mice, skeletal muscles evaluated for glycogen clearance and proliferated lysosomes. Treatment with alglucosidase alfa modestly reduced glycogen or proliferated lysosomes while ATB200, co-administered with AT2221 significantly decreased the muscle pathology associated with Pompe disease. vehicle alglucosidase alfa ATB200 + AT2221 wildtype mice _ 20 5 10 20 20 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ + alglucosidase alfa (mg/kg) ATB200 (mg/kg) Chaperone AT2221 Tissue Glycogen- Quadriceps 2 administrations every other week; tissues harvested 2 weeks after last dose ATB200/AT2221 Improved Substrate Clearance and Cellular Physiology in Preclinical Models1

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Functional Muscle Strength ATB200/AT2221 Progressively Increased Muscle Function and Appears to Induce Muscle Repair and/or Regeneration Rather than Just Maintenance of Damaged Muscle ATB200/AT2221 Preclinical Data Summary * p<0.05 in 2-sided t-test against alglucosidase alfa Note: error bar is SEM Every other week dosing; muscle function tested monthly Base line 1 month 2 months 3 months 4 months 5 months 0 40 80 120 Latency(s) Wire Hang Test WT ATB200 + AT2221 alglucosidase alfa vehicle Baseline 1 month 2 months 3 months 4 months 5 months 80 100 120 140 160 Grip Strength Test Maximum grip(g) vehicle alglucosidase alfa ATB200 + AT2221 WT * * * * *: p<0.05 in 2-sided t-test against alglucosidase alfa

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Phase 1/2 ATB200-02 Study Design Novel ERT for Pompe Disease – ATB200 + Chaperone Phase 1/2 Clinical Study to Evaluate Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics (PK), and Pharmacodynamics (PD) of ATB200 + Chaperone (ATB200/AT2221) 18-Week Primary Treatment Period with Long-Term Extension (n ~20) ATB200 5mg/kg (wk 2) 10mg/kg (wk 4) 20mg/kg (wk 6) ATB200 20mg/kg + AT2221 (Low Dose) wks 8,10,12 ATB200 20mg/kg + AT2221 (High Dose) wk 14+ Cohort 1 (Ambulatory ERT-Switch) Cohort 2 (Non-Ambulatory ERT-Switch) & Cohort 3 (ERT-Naive) ATB200 20mg/kg + AT2221 (High Dose) wk 2+ Plasma PK Safety/Tolerability Infusion-Associated Reactions Antibody & Cytokine Levels Pharmacodynamics Efficacy (Long-Term Extension) Assessments:

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Pharmacokinetics in ERT-experienced patients (Cohort 1 N=8)* Pompe Phase 1/2 Study ATB200-02 Preliminary Data ATB200 Clinical PK Profile as Predicted Based on Preclinical Studies with Greater than Dose Proportional Increases in Exposure that were Enhanced by AT2221 Mean GAA Total Protein (n=8) 5, 10, 20 mg/kg ATB200 Alone Mean GAA Total Protein (n=8) 20 mg/kg ATB200 + AT2221 Treatment Mean AUC0-∞ (hr*g/ml) Mean Half-Life (hr) 5 mg/kg 218 1.1 10 mg/kg 584 1.3 20 mg/kg 1512 1.5 Treatment Mean AUC0-∞ (hr*g/ml) Mean Half-Life (hr) 20 mg/kg 1512 1.5 +low dose AT2221 1808 1.9 +high dose AT2221 1901 2.3 2 patients excluded that did not have full PK data at time of data cut 0 4 8 12 16 20 24 0.1 1 10 100 1000 Cohort 1 Mean Total GAA Protein (T09) for ATB200 Alone Time (hr) Plasma Total Protein T 0 9 ( m g / m L ) 5 mg/kg ATB200 (N=8) 10 mg/kg ATB200 (N=8) 20 mg/kg ATB200 (N=8) 0 4 8 12 16 20 24 0.1 1 10 100 1000 Cohort 1 Mean Total GAA Protein (T09) for ATB200 with and without AT2221 Time (hr) Plasma Total Protein T 0 9 ( m g / m L ) 20 mg/kg ATB200 (N=8) 20 mg/kg ATB200 + Low Dose AT2221 MD (N=8) 20 mg/kg ATB200 + High Dose AT2221 MD (N=8)

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Cohort 1: Biomarkers at Week 18 (N=8) After Switching from SOC to ATB200/A2221 Patients Generally Demonstrated an Improvement in Biomarkers of Muscle Damage (ALT, AST, CK) and Biomarkers of Disease Substrate (Hex4) Pompe Phase 1/2 Study ATB200-02 Preliminary Data Percent Change from Baseline for ALT, AST and CK Percent Change from Baseline for Hex 4 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30 40 M e a n Percent Change from Base line CPK AST ALT Dose Escalation Stage 1 ATB200 + AT2221 Stage 2 Visit Baseline 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ATB200 (mg/kg) 5 10 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 AT2221 (mg) low low low high high high Sample size 10 10 8 9 9 8 8 8 8 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 Mean Percent Change from Base line HEX4 Dose Escalation Stage 1 ATB200 + AT2221 Stage 2 Visit Baseline 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ATB200 (mg/kg) 5 10 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 AT2221 (mg) low low low high high high Sample size 10 10 10 9 8 8 8 8 8

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Cohort 3: Biomarkers at Week 4 (N=2) Initial Two Naïve Patients Treated with ATB200/AT2221 Demonstrated Robust Reduction in Biomarkers of Muscle Damage (ALT, AST, CK) and Biomarkers of Disease Substrate (Hex4) Pompe Phase 1/2 Study ATB200-02 Preliminary Data Percent Change from Baseline for ALT, AST and CK Percent Change from Baseline for Hex 4 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 Mean Percent Change from Base line HEX4 Visit Baseline Week 2 Week 4 Sample size 2 2 2 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30 40 Mean Percent Change from Base line CPK AST ALT Visit Baseline Week 2 Week 4 Sample size 2 2 2

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Muscle Biomarkers and Urine Hex 4 (N=10)* In ERT-switch patients (Week 18): ALT decreased in 5 of 8 patients; 4/4 patients with elevated baseline levels normalized AST decreased in 6 of 8 patients; 3/4 patients with elevated baseline levels normalized CK decreased in 6 of 8 patients; 2/6 patients with elevated baseline levels normalized ALT, AST, CK generally remained stable for patients not demonstrating a decrease Urine Hexose Tetrasaccharide (Hex4) decreased in 8 of 8 patients; overall reduction approximately 30% In ERT- naïve patients (Week 4): ALT, AST, CK and Urine Hex4 decreased in 2 of 2 patients. Pompe Phase 1/2 Study ATB200-02 Preliminary Data *N=10 includes 8 switch and 2 naïve patients

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Preliminary Data Summary Safety (N=13)* No serious adverse events (SAEs) AEs were generally mild and transient Tolerability No infusion-associated reactions following 150+ infusions in all patients enrolled to date PK (N=10)** Clinical PK profile as predicted consistent with previously reported preclinical data ATB200 plasma clearance rate suggests optimized carbohydrate structure provides efficient uptake into tissues ATB200 alone showed greater than dose-proportional increases in exposure, which was further enhanced with AT2221 Muscle damage biomarkers (CK, AST, ALT) and substrate biomarker (urine Hex4) (N=10)** Decrease/normalization of muscle injury biomarkers and biomarker of substrate following a switch from SOC to ATB200/AT2220, and in ERT-naïve patients, suggests positive effect of the new therapy on muscle cells Pompe Phase 1/2 Study ATB200-02 Preliminary Data ATB200/AT2221 Demonstrates Promising Preliminary Results in First ERT-Switch Patients at the Targeted Therapeutics Dose *N=10 from Cohort 1 (Ambulatory ERT-Switch); N=1 from Cohort 2 (Non-Ambulatory ERT-Switch); N=2 from Cohort 3 (Naïve) **N=8 from Cohort 1 & N=2 from Cohort 3

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Biologics Manufacturing Capabilities Novel ERT for Pompe Disease – ATB200 + Chaperone Highly Successful Biologics Manufacturing Scale-up in Three Years Research Scale / MCB 1000L (Registration Trial & Commercial Scale) 2016-2017+ 5L (Bench Scale) 2013 250L (Clinical Scale) 2014-2015+ Proprietary Process

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Pompe Clinical Study ATB200-02 Data Cascade Novel ERT for Pompe Disease – ATB200 + Chaperone A Cascade of Additional Data Points During 2017 to Demonstrate Proof of Concept Pompe Milestones in 2017 Meeting with U.S. and EU regulators 18-WEEK DATA Safety / tolerability Pharmacokinetics (PK) EXTENSION DATA Motor/pulmonary function Additional extension study data (all Cohorts) Data in ERT-naïve patients (Cohort 3) Data in non-ambulatory ERT-switch patients (Cohort 2) Additional data & initial extension data in Cohort 1 Biomarkers Immunogenicity

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SD-101 for Epidermolysis Bullosa Potential First-in-Class Treatment with Phase 3 Data Anticipated Mid-2017

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EB Disease Overview SD-101 for EB Rare, Devastating, Connective Tissue Disorder with No Approved Treatments Disease Overview Multiple genes cause disease Can affect internal organs Can be fatal Wounds can lead to life-threatening infections Diagnosis: infancy to adulthood 30,000 – 40,000+ diagnosed in major global regions $1B+ potential market Three Major EB Types (~99% of EB Population) SIMPLEX (75%) DYSTROPHIC (20%) JUNCTIONAL (5%)

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Proof of Concept Findings Phase 2 Results Informed Phase 3 Design SD-101 for EB Breakthrough Therapy Designation Phase 2a Key Takeaways (SD-101 3%) Faster time to wound closure Higher proportion with complete closure Reduction in total body surface area (BSA) of wounds Larger wounds (>10 cm2) showed widest separation versus placebo Daily administration generally safe and well-tolerated Informed Phase 3 Study Design Phase 2b Key Takeaways (SD-101 6%) 1-Year-Old Girl with EB Simplex at Baseline Following 2 months of treatment with SD-101

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Phase 3 Study - Delivering on Our EB Vision Phase 3 Study Optimized for Success with Top-Line Data Anticipated Mid-2017 SD-101 for EB SD-005 Study Design Optimized 95%+ participation in extension study Enrollment near complete Top-line data anticipated mid-2017 Status Sample size of up to 150 patients Larger baseline target wound size Time to wound closure endpoint elevated

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Cyclin-Dependent Kinase-Like 5 (CDKL5) Deficiency CDKL5 Deficiency Program Preclinical Development Underway for a Rare, Devastating, Genetic Neurological Disease with No Approved Treatments 1. LouLouFoundation.org Disease Overview Genetic mutations in CDKL5 gene result in deficient protein essential for normal brain development Persistent, spontaneous seizures starting in infancy Severe impairment in neurological development Most affected children cannot walk, talk or care for themselves May include scoliosis, visual impairment, sensory issues, and gastrointestinal complications >1,200 documented cases worldwide1 Patient identification rising significantly

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Financial Summary & Key Milestones

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Financial Summary & Guidance Conclusion Financial Position December 31, 2016 Cash $331M Debt $250M FY17 Net Operating Cash Flow Guidance $175-$200M FY17 Net Cash Spend Guidance* $200-$225M Cash Runway 2H18 Capitalization December 31, 2016 Shares Outstanding 142,691,986 Cash Position Provides Runway Under Current Operating Plan into mid-2017 Balance Sheet Strengthened with $331M Cash at 12/31/16 and Cash Runway Into 2H18 *Includes third party milestone payments and capital expenditures

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Pompe Phase 1/2 data cascade Pompe end of Phase 2 meeting Runway into 2H18 Meaningful revenue contribution from Galafold EB Phase 3 data Galafold international launch continues Japan NDA submission Fabry GI study initiation 2017 Key Milestones in 2017 Conclusion Phase 1/2 data cascade Meetings with U.S. and EU regulators Significant revenue contribution in 2017 Runway into 2H18 Phase 3 data Galafold international launch targeting 300 patients by YE17 Japan NDA submission Fabry GI study initiation Pompe Disease (ATB200/AT2221) Strong Balance Sheet Epidermolysis Bullosa (EB) (SD-101) Fabry Disease (Galafold)

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Thank You

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Exhibit 99.2

Pompe Disease: A New Understanding & A New Approach February 2017

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Safe Harbor This presentation contains "forward- looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements relating to encouraging pre-clinical and preliminary clinical data from a global phase 1/2 study to investigate ATB200/AT2221 for the treatment of Pompe and the potential implications on these data for the future advancement and development of ATB200/AT2221. Words such as, but not limited to, “look forward to,” “believe,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “estimate,” “intend,” "confidence," "encouraged," “potential,” “plan,” “targets,” “likely,” “may,” “will,” “would,” “should” and “could,” and similar expressions or words identify forward-looking statements. The forward looking statements included in this presentation are based on management's current expectations and belief's which are subject to a number of risks, uncertainties and factors, including that both the preclinical and the preliminary data based on a small patient sample and reported before completion of the study will not be predictive of future results, that results of additional preclinical, preliminary clinical data or data from the completed study or any future study will not yield results that are consistent with the preclinical and preliminary data presented, that the Company will be not able to demonstrate the safety and efficacy of ATB200/AT2221, that later study results will not support further development, or even if such later results are favorable, that the Company will not be able to successfully complete the development of, obtain regulatory approval for, or successfully commercialize ATB200/AT2221. In addition, all forward looking statements are subject to the other risks and uncertainties detailed in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015 and Quarterly Report on 10-Q for the Quarter ended September 30, 2016. As a consequence, actual results may differ materially from those set forth in this presentation. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward looking statements, which speak only of the date hereof. All forward looking statements are qualified in their entirety by this cautionary statement and we undertake no obligation to revise this presentation to reflect events or circumstances after the date hereof. Introduction

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Introduction & Pompe Landscape

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SUMMARY OF KEY TAKEAWAYS FROM WORLD SYMPOSIUM Amicus Research is Changing the Way that the Pathophysiology of Pompe Disease is Understood and Preclinical and Clinical Data Suggest that the Amicus Treatment Paradigm of ATB200/AT2221 Has the Potential to Become the New Standard of Care Introduction PROFOUND ADVANCEMENT IN POMPE UNDERSTANDING FROM AMICUS SCIENCE: Amicus research shown at the WORLDSymposium significantly advances understanding of the causes of muscle devastation in Pompe disease and potentially links Pompe to other forms of muscular dystrophy LIMITATIONS OF CURRENT ERT STANDARD OF CARE: The current ERT, while having efficacy, has significant limitations on targeting, activity and tolerability. Many patients continue to decline in muscle function while on current ERT1 ATB200/AT2221 IS DESIGNED TO BE HIGHLY DIFFERENTIATED FROM CURRENT ERT AND FROM NEO-GAA PRECLINICAL DATA FROM WORLD SHOW ATB200/AT2221 DISTINGUISHED: Data demonstrate reversal of cellular damage to enable muscle repair and improve muscle cytoarchitecture, and improved strength in Pompe KO model LATEST RELEASE OF ATB200/AT2221 CLINICAL DATA SHOWS FURTHER TRENDS TOWARD IMPROVEMENT ON ALL KEY BIOMARKERS OF DISEASE ASSESSED, DISTINCT FROM OTHERS’ PUBLISHED DATA 1. Wyatt, et al., HTA. (2012)

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Pompe Disease Overview Pompe Disease is Heterogeneous Across a Broad Spectrum of Patients Introduction Deficiency of GAA leading to glycogen accumulation Age of onset ranges from infancy to adulthood Symptoms include muscle weakness, respiratory failure, and cardiomyopathy Respiratory and cardiac failure are leading causes of morbidity and mortality 5,000 – 10,000 patients diagnosed WW1 ~$800M+ Global Pompe ERT sales in FY152 1. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NIH). 2. Sanofi Press Release & 10-K

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Pompe Development History 20+ Years of Development Have Led to ONE Approved Product. Significant Unmet Need Remains Introduction 2003 1998 2006 2004 2010 2013 2014 Myozyme entered clinic First rhGAA cell line developed Myozyme approved (infants) NeoGAA preclinical data first published1 BMN-701 entered clinic Lumizyme approved (LOPD) NeoGAA entered clinic BMN-701 entered Phase 2/3 switch study ATB200/AT2221 entered clinic BMN-701 discontinued NeoGAA Phase 3 study initiated 2016 1. Zhu, et al., Biochem J. (2004)

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Myozyme/Lumizyme Overview Validated MOA ERT produced by recombinant DNA technology Exogenous source of GAA M6P carbohydrate groups of Lumizyme molecules bind to M6P receptors on cell surface for uptake and delivery to lysosomes Infant-onset study: prolonged vent-free survival Late-onset study (LOTS): increases in 6MWT, FVC ~$800M+ Global sales in FY151 Key challenges remain with targeting, activity and tolerability rhGAA Designed to Replace Deficient/Missing GAA Enzyme is First and Only Approved Treatment Introduction 1.. Sanofi 10-K

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neoGAA Overview Initial modifications: no difference in glycogen reduction vs. unmodified rhGAA in Pompe mice1 Alternate approach (oxime-neo-rhGAA)2 Chemically conjugated a synthetic oligosaccharide bearing M6P residues directly onto rhGAA Greater glycogen reduction and corresponding increase in muscle strength and motor function in mice Improved muscle strength observed in preclinical data but not conclusively demonstrated in Phase 1 clinical study3 rhGAA Modified for Higher M6P Levels (After Production) was First Published in 2004 and is Currently in Phase 3 Development Introduction 1. Zhu, et al., Biochem J. (2004), 2. Zhu, et al., MolTher. (2009), 3. WORLDSymposium 2016 Synthetic M6P-Bearing Oligosaccharide & Scheme for Conjugation to rhGAA

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BMN-701 Overview Glycosylation-independent insulin-like growth factor 2 (GILT) binding region of CI-MPR designed to enhance uptake Off-target effects on IGF-1 and insulin receptor Preclinical data on glycogen reduction correlated with improvements in respiratory function Clinical data on FVC and 6MWT did not differentiate from standard of care Program discontinued in 2016 rhGAA with IGF-2 Targeting Moiety to Enhance Cellular Uptake Introduction Adapted from Westlund, et al., J. Biol. Chem. (1991)

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Data on 6-Minute Walk Test (6MWT) Next-Generation Therapies Have Not Significantly Differentiated from Standard of Care to Date on 6MWT Introduction Investigational Treatment (Duration) 6MWT (m) (Naives) 6MWT (m) (Switch) Untreated (LOTS 78 wks)1 Double Blind Placebo Controlled Study N=30 -3 N/A Lumizyme 20 mg/kg (LOTS 78 wks)1 Double Blind Placebo Controlled Study N=60 29 N/A BMN-701 20 mg/kg (24 Weeks)2 Open Label Phase 1 Study N=16 Naïve Open Label Phase 2 Study N=18 Switch 22 26 NeoGAA 20 mg/kg (24 Weeks)3 Open Label Phase 1 Study N=3 Naïve and N=6 Switch 24 -6 Change in 6MWT (m) from Baseline* *Rounded to Nearest Whole Number. 1. van der Ploeg, et al. NEJM (2010) 2. BioMarin press release March 2013, 3. WORLDSymposium 2016 Poster and Sanofi press release March 2016

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Data on Forced Vital Capacity (FVC) FVC has been a Relevant Endpoint in Previous Pompe Clinical Studies Introduction Investigational Treatment (Duration) FVC (%) - Naives FVC (%) - Switch Untreated (LOTS 78 wks)1 Double Blind Placebo Controlled Study N=30 -2.2 N/A Lumizyme 20 mg/kg(LOTS 78 wks)1 Double Blind Placebo Controlled Study N=30 1.2 N/A BMN-701 20 mg/kg (24 Weeks)2 Open Label Phase 1 Study N=16 Naïve Open Label Phase 2 Study N=18 Switch 2.0 -3.7 NeoGAA 20 mg/kg (24 Weeks)3 Open Label Phase 1 Study N=3 Naïve and N=6 Switch 6.2 1.4 Change in FVC (%) from Baseline 1. van der Ploeg, et al. NEJM (2010) 2. BioMarin press release March 2013, 3. WORLDSymposium 2016 Poster and Sanofi press release March 2016

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ATB200/AT2221: a Highly Differentiated Approach

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Pompe ERT - 3 Challenges Novel ERT for Pompe Disease – ATB200 + Chaperone Activity/ Stability Rapid denaturation of ERT in pH of blood1 Tolerability / Immunogenicity Infusion-associated reactions in >50% of late-onset patients3 Uptake/ Targeting Low M6P receptor uptake into skeletal muscle2 Antibody titers shown to affect treatment outcomes4,5 Vast majority of rhGAA not delivered to lysosomes2 Protein Aggregation 1. Khanna et al., PLoS ONE, 2012; 2. Zhu et al., Amer. Soc. Gene Therapy, 2009 June; 3. Banati et al., Muscle Nerve, 2011 Dec.; 4. Banugaria et al., Gen. Med., 2011 Aug.; 5. de Vries et al., Mol Genet Metab., 2010 Dec. Amicus Technology Platforms with Potential to Address Challenges with Existing Pompe ERT Uniquely Engineered rhGAA Optimized M6P & Carbohydrates

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Novel Pompe Treatment Paradigm with Three Key Differentiators Novel ERT for Pompe Disease – ATB200 + Chaperone Chaperone addition Optimized mixture of glycans ATB200 + Chaperone: A Highly Differentiated Approach ATB200 (Novel ERT) High levels of M6P and bis M6P *Artist rendering, not actual product image

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Lysosomal Glycogen Accumulation and Muscle Weakness Gaa deficiency leads to: accumulation of glycogen in lysosomes of muscles significant cellular dysfunction that alters protein trafficking for key muscle proteins Incomplete assembly of critical protein complexes that alters cytoarchitecture and compromises muscle membrane integrity and stability Understanding Why a Metabolic Disease Leads to Profound Muscle Weakness ATB200/AT2221 Preclinical Data Summary wild type mice (normal) Gaa KO mice Glycogen Accumulation (PAS staining) Cellular Dysfunction (methylene blue staining) Damaged Cytoarchitecture (electron microscopy)

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Substrate Clearance & Cellular Physiology ATB200/AT2221 Preclinical Data Summary 1. Following 2 doses of 20mg/kg alglucosidase alfa or ATB200 + AT2221 in Gaa KO mice, skeletal muscles evaluated for glycogen clearance and proliferated lysosomes. Treatment with alglucosidase alfa modestly reduced glycogen or proliferated lysosomes while ATB200, co-administered with AT2221 significantly decreased the muscle pathology associated with Pompe disease. vehicle alglucosidase alfa ATB200 + AT2221 wildtype mice _ 20 5 10 20 20 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ + alglucosidase alfa (mg/kg) ATB200 (mg/kg) Chaperone AT2221 Tissue Glycogen- Quadriceps 2 administrations every other week; tissues harvested 2 weeks after last dose ATB200/AT2221 Improved Substrate Clearance and Cellular Physiology in Preclinical Models1

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Cellular Repair & Muscle Strength ATB200/AT2221 Preclinical Data Summary 1. Following 2 doses of 20mg/kg alglucosidase alfa or ATB200 + AT2221 in Gaa KO mice, skeletal muscles evaluated for glycogen clearance and proliferated lysosomes. Treatment with alglucosidase alfa modestly reduced glycogen or proliferated lysosomes while ATB200, co-administered with AT2221 significantly decreased the muscle pathology associated with Pompe disease. ATB200/AT2221 Reversed Cellular Damage to Enable Muscle Repair and Improve Muscle Cytoarchitecture1

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Functional Muscle Strength ATB200/AT2221 Progressively Increased Muscle Function and Appears to Induce Muscle Repair and/or Regeneration Rather than Just Maintenance of Damaged Muscle ATB200/AT2221 Preclinical Data Summary * p<0.05 in 2-sided t-test against alglucosidase alfa Note: error bar is SEM Every other week dosing; muscle function tested monthly B a s e l i n e 1 m o n t h 2 m o n t h s 3 m o n t h s 4 m o n t h s 5 m o n t h s 0 40 80 120 L a t e n c y ( s ) Wire Hang Test WT ATB200 + AT2221 alglucosidase alfa vehicle B a s e l i n e 1 m o n t h 2 m o n t h s 3 m o n t h s 4 m o n t h s 5 m o n t h s 80 100 120 140 160 Grip Strength Test M a x i m u m g r i p ( g ) vehicle alglucosidase alfa ATB200 + AT2221 WT * * * * *: p<0.05 in 2-sided t-test against alglucosidase alfa

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Phase 1/2 ATB200-02 Study Design Pompe Phase 1/2 Study ATB200-02 Preliminary Data Phase 1/2 Clinical Study to Evaluate Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics (PK), and Pharmacodynamics (PD) of ATB200 + Chaperone (ATB200/AT2221) 18-Week Primary Treatment Period with Long-Term Extension (n ~20) ATB200 5mg/kg (wk 2) 10mg/kg (wk 4) 20mg/kg (wk 6) ATB200 20mg/kg + AT2221 (Low Dose) wks 8,10,12 ATB200 20mg/kg + AT2221 (High Dose) wk 14+ Cohort 1 (Ambulatory ERT-Switch) Cohort 2 (Non-Ambulatory ERT-Switch) & Cohort 3 (ERT-Naive) ATB200 20mg/kg + AT2221 (High Dose) wk 2+ Plasma PK Safety/Tolerability Infusion-Associated Reactions Antibody & Cytokine Levels Pharmacodynamics Efficacy (Long-Term Extension) Assessments:

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Pharmacokinetics in ERT-experienced patients (Cohort 1 N=8)* Pompe Phase 1/2 Study ATB200-02 Preliminary Data ATB200 Clinical PK Profile as Predicted Based on Preclinical Studies with Greater than Dose Proportional Increases in Exposure that were Enhanced by AT2221 Mean GAA Total Protein (n=8) 5, 10, 20 mg/kg ATB200 Alone Mean GAA Total Protein (n=8) 20 mg/kg ATB200 + AT2221 Treatment Mean AUC0- (hr*g/ml) Mean Half-Life (hr) 5 mg/kg 218 1.1 10 mg/kg 584 1.3 20 mg/kg 1512 1.5 Treatment Mean AUC0- (hr*g/ml) Mean Half-Life (hr) 20 mg/kg 1512 1.5 +low dose AT2221 1808 1.9 +high dose AT2221 1901 2.3 2 patients excluded that did not have full PK data at time of data cut 0 4 8 12 16 20 24 0.1 1 10 100 1000 Cohort 1 Mean Total GAA Protein (T09) for ATB200 Alone Time (hr) P l a s m a T o t a l P r o t e i n T 0 9 ( m g / m L ) 5 mg/kg ATB200 (N=8) 10 mg/kg ATB200 (N=8) 20 mg/kg ATB200 (N=8) 0 4 8 12 16 20 24 0.1 1 10 100 1000 Cohort 1 Mean Total GAA Protein (T09) for ATB200 with and without AT2221 Time (hr) P l a s m a T o t a l P r o t e i n T 0 9 ( m g / m L ) 20 mg/kg ATB200 (N=8) 20 mg/kg ATB200 + Low Dose AT2221 MD (N=8) 20 mg/kg ATB200 + High Dose AT2221 MD (N=8)

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Cohort 1: Biomarkers at Week 18 (N=8) After Switching from SOC to ATB200/A2221 Patients Generally Demonstrated an Improvement in Biomarkers of Muscle Damage (ALT, AST, CK) and Biomarker of Disease Substrate (Hex4) Pompe Phase 1/2 Study ATB200-02 Preliminary Data Percent Change from Baseline for ALT, AST and CK Percent Change from Baseline for Hex 4 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30 40 M e a n P e r c e n t C h a n g e f r o m B a s e l i n e CPK AST ALT Dose Escalation Stage 1 ATB200 + AT2221 Stage 2 Visit Baseline 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ATB200 (mg/kg) 5 10 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 AT2221 (mg) low low low high high high Sample size 10 10 8 9 9 8 8 8 8 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 M e a n P e r c e n t C h a n g e f r o m B a s e l i n e HEX4 Dose Escalation Stage 1 ATB200 + AT2221 Stage 2 Visit Baseline 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 ATB200 (mg/kg) 5 10 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 AT2221 (mg) low low low high high high Sample size 10 10 10 9 8 8 8 8 8

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Cohort 3: Biomarkers at Week 4 (N=2) Initial Two Naïve Patients Treated with ATB200/AT2221 Demonstrated Robust Reduction in Biomarkers of Muscle Damage (ALT, AST, CK) and Biomarker of Disease Substrate (Hex4) Pompe Phase 1/2 Study ATB200-02 Preliminary Data Percent Change from Baseline for ALT, AST and CK Percent Change from Baseline for Hex 4 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 M e a n P e r c e n t C h a n g e f r o m B a s e l i n e HEX4 Visit Baseline Week 2 Week 4 Sample size 2 2 2 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30 40 M e a n P e r c e n t C h a n g e f r o m B a s e l i n e CPK AST ALT Visit Baseline Week 2 Week 4 Sample size 2 2 2

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Muscle Damage Biomarkers and Urine Hex 4 (N=10)* In ERT-switch patients (Week 18): ALT decreased in 5 of 8 patients; 4/4 patients with elevated baseline levels normalized AST decreased in 6 of 8 patients; 3/4 patients with elevated baseline levels normalized CK decreased in 6 of 8 patients; 2/6 patients with elevated baseline levels normalized ALT, AST, CK generally remained stable for patients not demonstrating a decrease Urine Hexose Tetrasaccharide (Hex4) decreased in 8 of 8 patients; overall reduction approximately 30% In ERT- naïve patients (Week 4): ALT, AST, CK and Urine Hex4 decreased in 2 of 2 patients. Pompe Phase 1/2 Study ATB200-02 Preliminary Data *N=10 includes 8 switch and 2 naïve patients

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Preliminary Data Summary Safety (N=13)* No serious adverse events (SAEs) AEs were generally mild and transient Tolerability No infusion-associated reactions following 150+ infusions in all patients enrolled to date PK (N=10)** Clinical PK profile as predicted consistent with previously reported preclinical data ATB200 plasma clearance rate suggests optimized carbohydrate structure provides efficient uptake into tissues ATB200 alone showed greater than dose-proportional increases in exposure, which was further enhanced with AT2221 Muscle damage biomarkers (CK, AST, ALT) and substrate biomarker (urine Hex4) (N=10)** Decrease/normalization of muscle injury biomarkers and biomarker of substrate following a switch from SOC to ATB200/AT2220, and in ERT-naïve patients, suggests positive effect of the new therapy on muscle cells Pompe Phase 1/2 Study ATB200-02 Preliminary Data ATB200/AT2221 Demonstrates Promising Preliminary Results in First ERT-Switch Patients at the Targeted Therapeutics Dose *N=10 from Cohort 1 (Ambulatory ERT-Switch); N=1 from Cohort 2 (Non-Ambulatory ERT-Switch); N=2 from Cohort 3 (Naïve) **N=8 from Cohort 1 & N=2 from Cohort 3

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Upcoming Pompe Milestones

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Pompe Disease: A Complex Disease with Significant Unmet Needs We’ve Made Great Strides and Expect to Address Key Remaining Questions in 2017 Novel ERT for Pompe Disease – ATB200 + Chaperone preclinical clinical Enhanced levels of M6P Optimized glycosylation Improved in vitro cellular uptake Enhanced ERT activity & stability Greater ERT uptake into muscle in Pompe KO mice Greater glycogen reduction in Pompe KO mice Desired PK profile & half-life Safety in ERT-switch Early biomarkers of muscle repair Excellent tolerability Muscle disease-causing biology Improved clinical outcomes? Superior functional outcomes vs SOC in Pompe KO mouse key question

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Pompe Clinical Study ATB200-02 Data Cascade Novel ERT for Pompe Disease – ATB200 + Chaperone A Cascade of Additional Data Points During 2017 to Demonstrate Proof of Concept Pompe Milestones in 2017 Meeting with U.S. and EU regulators 18-WEEK DATA Safety / tolerability Pharmacokinetics (PK) EXTENSION DATA Motor/pulmonary function Additional extension study data (all Cohorts) Data in ERT-naïve patients (Cohort 3) Data in non-ambulatory ERT-switch patients (Cohort 2) Additional data & initial extension data in Cohort 1 Biomarkers Immunogenicity

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Biologics Manufacturing Capabilities Novel ERT for Pompe Disease – ATB200 + Chaperone Highly Successful Biologics Manufacturing Scale-up in Three Years Research Scale / MCB 1000L (Registration Trial & Commercial Scale) 2016-2017+ 5L (Bench Scale) 2013 250L (Clinical Scale) 2014-2015+ Proprietary Process

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Thank You

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