ESMO: Merck’s kidney cancer med, nabbed in Peloton buyout, keeps on delivering with additional responses

On September 18, 2020 Merck reported that phase 2 data for a kidney cancer drug picked up in its $1.05 billion Peloton buyout, showing it shrank tumors in 28% of patients (Press release, Merck & Co, SEP 18, 2020, View Source [SID1234565373]). Now, that number has jumped to 36%, and the drug is showing promise at shrinking tumors outside of the kidney.

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The new data show the drug, a HIF-2α inhibitor dubbed MK-6482, reduced tumor size enough in 36% of patients for them to be considered responders. But that’s not all—another 38% of patients had stable disease, meaning their tumors had stopped growing, and 92% of patients saw at least some tumor shrinkage.

These numbers are in line with Merck’s expectations that the drug would work in more patients over time. The data, presented Friday at this year’s virtual annual meeting of the European Society for Medical Oncology, show that it takes at least three months for patients to see results, with some patients taking the drug for more than a year (62 weeks) before they start responding. The median time to response was nearly seven months. After one year, MK-6482 staved off cancer progression in virtually all 61 patients (98%).

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And when the treatment works, it continues to work. "I think it’s quite reassuring that these responses are durable. Sometimes, with new drugs, even though they might get an initial response, the tumors find a way to become resistant relatively quickly. What this says is that is just not true here," Eric Rubin, senior vice president of global clinical oncology at Merck Research Laboratories, said.

RELATED: Merck boosts late-phase cancer pipeline with $1.1B Peloton buy

The data are good news for patients with kidney cancer linked to Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) disease, a genetic condition that causes tumors and cysts to grow throughout the body. Patients with VHL disease do not make a protein that binds to HIF-2α, (hypoxia-inducible factor-2 alpha), which plays a role in regulating tissue oxygen levels.

As a result, the HIF-2α is always on, which ramps up the production of red blood cells, stimulates formation of new blood vessels and causes certain cells to proliferate. This leads to the development of growths in places as diverse as the brain, retina, liver, pancreas and lungs.

Despite developing tumors in many organs, it’s usually kidney cancer that kills these patients. They undergo surgery to remove kidney tumors, but those often return, or new ones appear. At some point, those tumors get too big to remove without losing the whole kidney, Roy Baynes, Merck senior vice president and global head of clinical development, said in a previous interview.

RELATED: ASCO (Free ASCO Whitepaper): Merck backs up Peloton buyout with promising kidney cancer data

In addition to tackling dangerous kidney tumors, MK-6482 moved the needle in other areas. It shrank pancreatic tumors in 64% of patients, completely banishing them in 7% of them, and shrank a type of benign tumor in the brain or spinal cord in 30% of patients. Of the 16 patients who had retinal growths, none saw them get worse, with 69% of them logging improvement and 25% staying stable.

All 61 patients experienced side effects, but in most patients—75%—they were mild. The most common side effect was anemia, affecting 90% of patients, but that wasn’t a surprise considering HIF-2α’s role in forming new red blood cells.

"Patients are generally responsive to erythropoietin," a hormone involved in making red blood cells, Baynes said, adding that "it can be managed quite readily."

Eight patients (13%) had severe treatment-related side effects, including one patient who developed hypoxia, or low levels of oxygen. One patient died from "toxicity of various agents," but the investigator deemed the death unrelated to treatment.

Although VHL is a relatively uncommon disease, blocking HIF-2α could be useful more broadly. Patients with kidney cancer that can’t be surgically treated or has metastasized tend to receive an immuno-oncology drug, often alongside a kinase inhibitor. If they relapse, they might try a different kinase inhibitor, Baynes said.

"What we find as we look at clear cell kidney cancer is VHL function is lost or silenced in almost nine out of 10 kidney cancer patients," he noted. "The majority of patients, once they’ve failed all treatments, actually have a dysregulated VHL pathway."

Targeting that pathway with a drug like MK-6842 could become an option for those patients. Merck is already testing the drug against standard of care in a phase 3 kidney cancer trial and studying it in combination with Exelixis’ Cabometyx in a phase 2 study in clear cell kidney cancer.

Phosplatin Therapeutics Announces Results from Phase 1b Dose Escalation Study of PT-112 Plus Avelumab in Patients with Solid Tumors

On September 18, 2020 Phosplatin Therapeutics, a clinical stage pharmaceutical company focused on oncology therapeutics, reported that data from a Phase 1b dose escalation study (NCT 03409458) of lead candidate PT-112, an immunogenic cell death inducer, used in combination with avelumab, a PD-L1 immune checkpoint inhibitor, in patients with progressing solid tumors who previously exhausted all available treatment options (Press release, Phosplatin, SEP 18, 2020, View Source [SID1234565370]). Data were pre-released under the Mini Oral presentation format (session 1026MO) in the Investigational Immunotherapy category at the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) (Free ESMO Whitepaper) Virtual Congress 2020, taking place September 19-21. Avelumab is co-developed and co-commercialized by Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany and Pfizer Inc.

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The combination of PT-112 and avelumab was found to be safe and well tolerated in 36 heavily pre-treated solid tumor patients who have exhausted standard therapy options, the majority of whom had received prior immunotherapy. Common treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs) were nausea (47%), fatigue (31%), thrombocytopenia (28%), and decreased appetite (28%); 44% of patients had grade 3-4 TRAEs (most frequent was thrombocytopenia: 17%). Clinical benefit was observed in patients treated with PT-112 doses ranging from 150 to 360mg/m2. Sixty percent of patients with RECIST-evaluable disease achieved stable disease or better, including a durable RECIST response, PSA response and improvement in bone scan and bone pain in a patient with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) with 8 prior therapies and no signature of likely response to immune checkpoint inhibition. Further activity signals were observed in patients with mCRPC, with 4 of 14 patients achieving a >50% PSA reduction, and consistent reduction in alkaline phosphatase (ALP) levels associated with bone metastatic site of disease.

"These results demonstrate that the PT-112 and avelumab combination is safe and well tolerated in heavily pre-treated patients. As in any advanced cancer population treated with numerous prior therapies, appropriate dose modifications are important. We are encouraged by activity observed thus far, and we look forward to confirming the combination dose in future studies as we seek treatment options for these patients who effectively have no other therapeutic alternatives remaining," said Daniel D. Karp, MD, Professor of Investigational Cancer Therapeutics at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.

No dose-limiting toxicities occurred during the study. The study enrolled 36 patients with progressing solid tumors across a range of tumor types, including 15 patients with mCRPC who were enrolled in a supplemental cohort. Phase 2 studies are planned to confirm the recommended dose, and to implement correlative immune-profiling assays.

"The results of this first combination study, including the evidence of activity among patients with prostate cancer, are indeed encouraging," said Robert Fallon, co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Phosplatin Therapeutics. "Based upon these data, our immunotherapy combination appears feasible and active. These results add to the emerging body of evidence around the potential of PT-112, as an immunogenic cell death (ICD) inducer, to provide benefit to patients with advanced solid tumors, and to offer a potential treatment to patients who do not respond to current immunotherapy options."

The study was conducted under a collaboration agreement between Phosplatin Therapeutics, Pfizer Inc. and Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany (EMD Serono in the US and Canada). Under the terms of the collaboration, Phosplatin Therapeutics is the Sponsor of Phase 1b/2a clinical trials in several indications. Pfizer and Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany supply avelumab for the trials.

The ESMO (Free ESMO Whitepaper) presentation is available on-demand for the duration of the conference to registered attendees, and the underlying abstract is publicly available.

About PT-112

PT-112 is the first small molecule conjugate of pyrophosphate developed in oncology therapeutics. PT-112 promotes immunogenic cell death (ICD), or the release of damage associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), that lead to downstream immune effector cell recruitment in the tumor microenvironment. PT-112 represents a potential best-in-class small molecule inducer of this immunological form of cancer cell death and is under Phase II development. The first in-human study of PT-112 demonstrated an attractive safety profile and evidence of long-lasting responses among heavily pre-treated patients and won "Best Poster" within the Developmental Therapeutics category at the ESMO (Free ESMO Whitepaper) 2018 Annual Congress. The novelty of its pyrophosphate moiety also results in osteotropism, or the propensity of the drug to reach the mineralized bone. This property is of interest in cancer types that originate in bone or frequently lead to metastatic bone involvement, such as metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). The first human clinical results in mCRPC were presented at the 2020 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium.

Avelumab Approved Indications

Avelumab (BAVENCIO) is indicated in the US for the maintenance treatment of patients with locally advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma (UC) that has not progressed with first-line platinum-containing chemotherapy. BAVENCIO is also indicated for the treatment of patients with locally advanced or metastatic UC who have disease progression during or following platinum-containing chemotherapy, or have disease progression within 12 months of neoadjuvant or adjuvant treatment with platinum-containing chemotherapy.

Avelumab in combination with axitinib is approved in the US for the first-line treatment of patients with advanced renal cell carcinoma (RCC).

In the US, the FDA granted accelerated approval for BAVENCIO for the treatment of adults and pediatric patients 12 years and older with metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC). This indication is approved under accelerated approval based on tumor response rate and duration of response. Continued approval may be contingent upon verification and description of clinical benefit in confirmatory trials.

Avelumab Important Safety Information from the US FDA-Approved Label

The warnings and precautions for avelumab (BAVENCIO) include immune-mediated adverse reactions (such as pneumonitis and hepatitis [including fatal cases], colitis, endocrinopathies, nephritis, and other immune-mediated adverse reactions as a single agent or in combination with axitinib [which can be severe and have included fatal cases]), infusion-related reactions, hepatotoxicity in combination with axitinib, major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in combination with axitinib [which can be severe and have included fatal cases], and embryo-fetal toxicity.

Common adverse reactions (reported in at least 20% of patients) in patients treated with BAVENCIO monotherapy include fatigue, musculoskeletal pain, diarrhea, nausea, infusion-related reaction peripheral edema, decreased appetite, urinary tract infection and rash. Common adverse reactions (reported in at least 20% of patients) in patients receiving BAVENCIO in combination with axitinib include diarrhea, fatigue, hypertension, musculoskeletal pain, nausea, mucositis, palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia, dysphonia, decreased appetite, hypothyroidism, rash, hepatotoxicity, cough, dyspnea, abdominal pain and headache. Grade 3-4 hematology laboratory value abnormalities reported in at least 10% of patients with Merkel cell carcinoma treated with BAVENCIO monotherapy include lymphopenia; in patients receiving BAVENCIO in combination with axitinib, grade 3-4 clinical chemistry abnormalities include blood triglyceride increased and lipase increased.

BioEclipse Therapeutics™ to Participate in the Sachs Annual Biotech in Europe Forum

On September 18, 2020 BioEclipse Therapeutics, a private clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing first-in-class, curative immuno-oncology therapeutics, reported that its CEO and founder Pamela Contag, Ph.D., and CFO Ben Carter will participate in the Sachs 20th Annual Biotech in Europe Forum, taking place September 21–24, 2020 via a virtual platform (Press release, BioEclipse Therapeutics, SEP 18, 2020, View Source [SID1234565369]).

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Dr. Contag will host virtual one-on-one meetings with investors and potential partners to discuss BioEclipse’s business strategy and highlight recent corporate achievements, as well as anticipated milestones in its clinical program for CRX100, BioEclipse’s lead investigative candidate. Institutional investors are invited to request meeting times.

To schedule a one-on-one meeting, please contact Dr. Contag or Mr. Carter at BioEclipse Therapeutics.

CRX100 is an intravenously delivered cancer therapy designed to target and destroy multiple cancer types and to prevent disease recurrence. It only targets tumor cells, leaving healthy tissue untouched, but it has the ability to reach tumors throughout the body. This means CRX100 holds promise for metastatic disease treatment with limited toxicity. BioEclipse plans to initiate a Phase 1 clinical trial in therapy-refractory solid tumors before year end.

BrainCool Announces Statistically Significant Late-Breaking Clinical Data at ESMO Virtual Congress 2020

On September 18, 2020 BrainCool AB, a Swedish medical device innovator, and a world leader in medical cooling technology for therapeutic hypothermia (brain cooling) and oncology, reported late-breaking clinical results of the Cooral System, a novel cooling device for the prevention of Oral Mucositis (OM), at the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) (Free ESMO Whitepaper) Virtual Congress 2020 (Press release, BrainCool, SEP 18, 2020, View Source [SID1234565368]).

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Data was collected from a Nordic multi-center pivotal trial led by Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, that enrolled 182 patients with multiple myeloma or lymphoma who were scheduled to receive high-dose chemotherapy prior to hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. The abstract was presented at ESMO (Free ESMO Whitepaper) by Java Walladbegi, PhD, Oral Medicine, Department of Oral Medicine & Pathology, Institute of Odontology at The Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Sweden. Dr. Walladbegi was project manager for the blinded, randomized investigation, which compared the efficacy of ice chips (IC) and an intra-oral cooling device (ICD; Cooral) for cryoprevention of OM.

Results from the randomized trial proved that the Cooral System was as effective as IC in terms of cryoprevention, with severe OM occurring in fewer than 10% of the cases tested. For patients with lymphoma, use of the Cooral System showed vastly improved prevention of OM and was significantly more effective when compared to the conventional method with IC [Oral Mucositis Assessment Scale (OMAS) mean total 1.77 vs 3.08; p = 0.047]. This finding is particularly notable because lymphoma patients are treated with longer courses of chemotherapy, making severe OM a life-threatening inevitability. As for patient-reported tolerability, both diagnostic groups (myeloma and lymphoma), reported a statistically significant higher degree of tolerability when Cooral was used as compared with IC [p = 0.020].

"This is a major breakthrough in patient-centered cancer care and treatment," said Martin Waleij, CEO of BrainCool. "Not only was the Cooral System shown to be safer and more feasible from the standpoint of infection control and comfort, our study shows that its use actually prevents OM occurrence. For patients faced with treatment times of up to six hours or more, that is a truly life-changing difference."

In addition to cancer care improvements, the study indicates potential economic benefits as well. Costs for patients with severe OM in conjunction with stem cell transplantation have been estimated at more than $70,000 per patient. The data presented at ESMO (Free ESMO Whitepaper) are a clear indication that most of these healthcare costs can be prevented with use of the Cooral System.

Presentation of this data at ESMO (Free ESMO Whitepaper) paves the way for market introduction of the Cooral System in the EU, following market clearance in early June 2020 as a class 2 invasive medical device. The device was CE marked for the EU / ESS markets as an invasive medical device this past June, and BrainCool is currently conducting a De Novo 510(k) process to obtain market clearance in the U.S.

The Cooral System features a disposable, thermostatically controlled intra-oral device that comprises closed conduits with continuously circulating water to evenly distribute the hypothermic medium to the oral mucosa. As the hypothermic medium gradually reaches a steady temperature, that temperature is consistently controlled and maintained in the oral mucosa, which in turn leads to reduced blood flow and exposure of tissue to chemotherapeutic agents—thus preventing soreness, erythema and painful ulcerative lesions.

"Oral Mucositis is among the most painful and debilitating adverse effects of both standard and high-dose chemotherapy within the field of oncology," said Dr. Java Walladbegi. "The data speaks for itself, and represents an important milestone in the quest to prevent this potentially lethal side-effect."

"We are opening an important new door in cancer care and treatment," adds Waleij. "Together with an anticipated scientific publication in early 2021, this ESMO (Free ESMO Whitepaper) late-breaking presentation marks the international launch of a groundbreaking improvement in cancer care that significantly improves quality of life for patients, and dramatically reduces the cost to deliver it."

About Oral Mucositis (OM)
OM is a highly significant and sometimes dose-limiting condition that has been reported as the single most-debilitating complication of cancer therapy. OM can be present in combination with a variety of debilitating symptoms that may compromise the ability of patients to maintain oral hygiene practices. For example, intractable oral pain, which may lead to an increased need for analgesics and, on occasions, opioids that are administered intravenously. OM is further associated with undernourishment, weight loss, the use of feeding tubes or total parenteral nutrition, and impaired quality of life, and it can represent a portal of entry for systemic infections that can lead to sepsis and death. Taken together, these symptoms, along with their related sequelae, can result in hospitalization and may incur increased costs for healthcare systems.

Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma Oncology Presents Findings from Phase 1 Clinical Study Evaluating Investigational Agent Dubermatinib in Patients with Advanced Solid Tumors at ESMO 2020 Virtual Annual Congress

On September 18, 2020 Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma Oncology, Inc., a developer of novel cancer therapeutics, reported new data from the ongoing Phase 1 study evaluating dubermatinib (TP-0903), an AXL kinase inhibitor, in patients with advanced solid tumors (Press release, Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma, SEP 18, 2020, View Source [SID1234565367]). These results were presented during a mini-oral presentation at the European Society of Medical Oncology (ESMO) (Free ESMO Whitepaper) 2020 Virtual Annual Congress, being held September 19-21, 2020.

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Preliminary findings from the Phase 1a/b first-in-human, open-label, dose-escalation, safety, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamic study indicated dubermatinib was well tolerated with a manageable safety profile as a monotherapy or in combination with immunotherapy or tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI). Dubermatinib, as a single agent and as part of the combination regimens, showed preliminary signs of clinical activity in the study, with four partial responses observed.1

The study consists of two parts. The dose escalation portion of the study enrolled 45 patients with advanced solid tumors across 10 dose levels of dubermatinib monotherapy. The expansion portion of the study enrolled 132 patients across five cohorts of various solid tumor types, including combination cohorts receiving dubermatinib plus immunotherapy or dubermatinib plus TKI.1

In the dose escalation portion of the study, 5% (n=2 of 45) of patients achieved a partial response when treated with dubermatinib monotherapy (1 patient with metastatic melanoma and 1 patient with intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma) and 29% (n=13 of 45) of patients experienced stable disease, resulting in an overall disease control rate of 33%.1

In the expansion portion of the study, 5% (n=1 of 21) of patients in Cohort A (one patient with non-small cell lung cancer treated with dubermatinib plus immunotherapy) and 5% (n=1 of 22) of patients in Cohort B (one patient with non-small cell lung cancer treated with dubermatinib plus TKI) achieved a partial response. Across cohorts, 14-48% of patients experienced stable disease and a disease control rate ranging from 14-53% was achieved. In Cohort C (patients with colorectal cancer treated with dubermatinib monotherapy), pharmacodynamic evaluation of pre- and post-treatment tumor biopsies and peripheral blood mononuclear cells correlated with clinical activity.1

The maximum tolerated dose of dubermatinib was determined to be 50 mg. The most frequently observed treatment-emergent adverse events of Grade 3 or higher at least possibly related to dubermatinib were nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.1

"These preliminary data presented at ESMO (Free ESMO Whitepaper) 2020 are encouraging as we learn more about how dubermatinib may inhibit the AXL kinase protein and sensitize cancer cells to treatment with other targeted agents in patients with advanced solid tumors," said David J. Bearss, Ph.D., Chief Scientific Officer and Global Head of Research, Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma Oncology (SDP Oncology). "We are continuing to advance this study to evaluate the potential role of dubermatinib in immune cell modulation by observing changes in the tumor immune microenvironment in patients with specific tumor types."

Below are the details for the SDP Oncology presentation:

Abstract Title

Details

Presenter

A Phase 1, First-in-human, Safety, Pharmacokinetic, and Pharmacodynamic Study of Oral Dubermatinib (TP-0903) in Patients with Advanced Solid Tumors

Presentation #536MO

Friday, September 18 at 9:56 a.m. CEST

Mini-Oral Presentation

John Sarantopoulos, M.D., UT Health San Antonio

About Dubermatinib (TP-0903)

Dubermatinib is an investigational oral AXL receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) inhibitor under evaluation in a Phase 1a/b study in patients with advanced solid tumors (NCT02729298) and an ongoing study in collaboration with the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society as part of the Beat AML Clinical Trial (NCT03013998). SDP Oncology is exploring parallel clinical development paths for dubermatinib in both solid and hematologic malignancies.

About AXL Kinase

AXL belongs to the TAM (Tyro3, AXL and Mer) family of receptor tyrosine kinases and is overexpressed in many human cancers.2 It plays a key role in tumor cell proliferation, survival, metastasis, cellular adhesion and avoidance of the immune response. The overexpression of AXL is associated with a poor patient prognosis and drug resistance.3