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Wednesday, May 4, 2022

Aptose Gets FDA Fast-Track Designation for Leukemia Treatment

 Aptose Biosciences Inc. on Wednesday said the U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted fast-track designation to HM43239 for the treatment of patients with relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia with FLT3 mutation.

The Toronto clinical-stage oncology company is currently conducting a Phase 1/2 study of HM43239 in patients with the cancer of the blood and bone marrow.

The FDA's fast-track program is designed to facilitate the development and expedite the review of treatments for serious or potentially life-threatening illnesses with high unmet medical needs. The agency previously granted orphan-drug designation to HM43239 for treatment of acute myeloid leukemia in 2018.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/APTOSE-BIOSCIENCES-INC-1410675/news/Aptose-Gets-FDA-Fast-Track-Designation-for-HM43239-40267154/

Transcript: United Therapeutics earnings call

 https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/UNITED-THERAPEUTICS-CORPO-11262/news/Transcript-United-Therapeutics-Corporation-Q1-2022-Earnings-Call-May-04-2022-40269734/

Valneva to launch trial for booster use of its COVID-19 vaccine

 French drugmaker Valneva said on Wednesday it will conduct a trial about the use of its COVID-19 vaccine candidate VLA2001 as a booster jab following a mRNA vaccination or natural infection.

The trial will be conducted in the Netherlands and results are expected in the third quarter of 2022, the statement said .

The VLA2001-307 trial will be the company’s first clinical trial to provide booster data following primary vaccination with an mRNA vaccine or natural COVID-19 infection.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/VALNEVA-SE-54466/news/Valneva-to-launch-trial-for-booster-use-of-its-COVID-19-vaccine-candidate-40270606/

COVID Americas cases up, N. American cases up for 5th week

 

COVID-19 cases in the Americas increased by 12.7% last week from the prior week, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) said on Wednesday, as infections continued to rise in Central and North America.

The Americas reported more than 616,000 new cases last week, while the death toll was down by less than 1% in the same comparison to 4,200, the organization said.

PAHO's director, Dr. Carissa F. Etienne, called for stronger measures to tackle the pandemic as cases and hospitalizations rise.

"COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are rising in far too many places, which should prompt us to strengthen our measures to combat the virus, including surveillance and preparedness," Etienne told a news conference.

"We must reach those who remain unvaccinated with the full COVID-19 vaccine primary series, and ensure access to boosters, especially to the most vulnerable," she added.

According to PAHO, cases were up for the fifth consecutive week in North America, rising 19.5%. That was driven by a 27.1% increase in the United States as new infections declined in Canada and Mexico.

Central America posted a 53.4% rise in infections in the same comparison, PAHO said, while the Caribbean reported a 15.4% increase in new infections, with cases rising in 24 of the 34 countries and territories.

South America posted an overall 8% drop in new infections, even as seven of its ten countries reported increases.

https://www.marketscreener.com/news/latest/COVID-Americas-cases-up-N-American-cases-up-for-5th-week-PAHO--40271010/

Transcript: CVS earnings call

 https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/CVS-HEALTH-CORPORATION-12230/news/CVS-Health-Corporation-Q1-2022-Earnings-Call-May-04-2022-40269577/

Close encounters of the Serd kind

 The idea of treating breast cancer with selective oestrogen receptor degraders, or Serds, has undergone a divergence. The pretreated setting looks increasingly driven by ESR1 mutation, but rather than focus on this the big pharma players are turning instead to front-line combination use.

An even stranger fact is that Radius Pharma, the only company so far that managed to design a second-line study geared at showing a benefit in ESR1-mutant disease – and which succeeded as a result – is not pursuing the first-line setting. Unless Radius moves quickly it will not have the upper hand for long.

Radius has this advantage as a result of the Emerald trial of its Serd, elacestrant, which succeeded in second-line ER-positive, Her2-negative breast cancer largely thanks to having been enriched for ESR1 mutation. There was a statistical PFS benefit versus standard of care (including Faslodex) in ESR1-positive patients, and these also drove a PFS benefit in all-comers.

Conversely, two subsequent studies in a similar setting – but not enriched for ESR1 – have failed recently. In March Sanofi’s amcenestrant flunked the Ameera-3 trial, and last week Roche’s giredestrant failed in Acelera.

Doomed to fail

Based on this trend the two remaining registrational Serd studies in the second-line setting now look doomed to fail; Astrazeneca’s Serena-2 trial of camizestrant reads out in the second half, while Lilly’s Ember-3 study of imlunestrant has a completion date of mid-2023. Neither enriches for ESR1 mutation, or tests for a benefit in this group as a primary endpoint.

Instead of amending trial designs the big pharmas are instead looking to position Serds in earlier settings of ER-positive Her2-negative breast cancer.

On April 28 Sanofi’s head of R&D, John Reed, said: “From the beginning we felt that the sweet spot for Serds was going to be in early lines of therapy. We took a swing in the late line [with amcenestrant], knowing the risks associated.”

On the same day Jake Van Naarden, head of Lilly’s Loxo division, stated: “The ultimate impact [for imlunestrant] is adjuvant, and we’re working on a trial design that we will share later in the year.” The company suggested that the failed second-line trials were underpowered.

For its part, Astra says there are differences between the projects. It is continuing with the now fully enrolled Serena-2 study, in which it expects 30-40% of patients to be ESR1-positive, and cites an earlier trial that showed camizestrant’s clinical activity in patients with and without ESR1 mutation.

Beating Faslodex

To understand why this debate has even arisen it is important to go back to the launch of the first Serd, Astra’s Faslodex. This now off-patent drug had poor bioavailability and was delivered intramuscularly, and only received a second-line label.

However, toxicity and poor bioavailability aside, there is no theoretical reason why Faslodex should not work first line, where the oestrogen receptor is thought to be an even bigger driver of disease than in later therapy lines, where resistance builds up.

Crucially, in patients with ESR1 mutations Faslodex is thought not to work as well as newer Serds. This might explain Radius’s success in the Emerald study: elacestrant and Faslodex alike might have proved efficacious in ESR1 wild-type patients, but the Radius project won out in those with ESR1 mutation.

More evidence of such a benefit comes from Roche’s failed Acelera trial: on April 25 Bill Anderson, the Swiss group’s head of pharma, said giredestrant yielded better progression-free survival versus standard of care in patients with baseline ESR1 mutations than in all-comers.

Sanofi says “most patients become ER-independent in their cancer journey”, and along with Roche and Astra is playing up the relevance of front-line studies that are already under way. With no need to beat Faslodex in these early lines the key for novel Serds will be to come out better than aromatase inhibition, in combination with other front-line drugs like Ibrance.

Oral Serds in late-stage development for ER+ve/Her2-ve breast cancer
 ElacestrantAmcenestrantGiredestrantCamizestrantImlunestrant
CompanyRadius Health/MenariniSanofiRocheAstrazenecaLilly
2nd-line studyEmeraldAmeera-3AceleraSerena-2Ember-3
Enrichment for ESR1 mutation?YesNoNoNoNo
ResultSucceeded in ESR1mut & all-comersFailedFailedDue H2 2022Ends Jun 2023
 
1st-line studyNone (Menarini's responsibility)Ameera-5PerseveraSerena-4Serena-6None
DesignIbrance combo, vs Ibrance + aromatase inh
Enrichment for ESR1 mutation?NoNoNoYes
DataEnds Jan 2024Ends Apr 2024Ends Nov 2025Ends Sep 2023
 
Adjuvant studyNone (Menarini's responsibility)Ameera-6LideraNoneNone (design to be revealed in 2022)
DesignVs FaslodexVs doc's choice
Enrichment for ESR1 mutation?NoNo
DataEnds Dec 2026Ends Dec 2025
Source: Evaluate Pharma & clinicaltrials.gov.

The debate about patient enrichment concerns earlier-stage biotechs too, including Arvinas and Zentalis; Stifel analysts recently wrote that the monotherapy setting looked increasingly like an ESR1-mutant story, and no doubt when these companies get around to designing registrational trials they will bear this in mind.

It is remarkable that so far only Radius has been able to score a second-line success. Roche, for instance, has been playing the Serd game for years with zero success so far; in 2014 it spent $725m buying Seragon, but both of this group’s lead Serd assets, RG6046 and RG6047, ended up in the bin. Giredestrant is the group’s third attempt.

But Radius now faces a big problem of its own. It is not running early-line elacestrant studies, saying these are the responsibility of its partner Menarini, and is focusing on getting its project approved second-line, where a filing is due in the current quarter.

Should any of Radius’s rivals score in the first-line setting elacestrant could see its second-line window close just as fast as it had opened.

https://www.evaluate.com/vantage/articles/news/trial-results/close-encounters-serd-kind

The Irak-4 approach has a wobble

 Irak-4 inhibition in autoimmune disease took a knock yesterday, with Pfizer quietly discontinuing its contender PF-06650833 in hidradenitis suppurativa. Kymera paid a big price, its stock losing 24%; the Irak-4 project KT-474 is Kymera’s lead, and analysts had been looking to Pfizer’s data to handicap KT-474’s own phase 1 atopic dermatitis/hidradenitis suppurativa update, due in the second half. Then again, Kymera did not help itself, coincidentally revealing that its phase 1 protocol had been amended to increase dosing from 14 to 28 days and add clinical endpoints, and disclosing that 10-20msec QTc prolongation had been observed in the study. The last point was not serious enough to be graded an adverse event, but one risk is that it might be exacerbated by continuous dosing. Stifel analysts said Pfizer’s move called into question Irak-4 as an autoimmune target. Still, the molecules act differently: PF-06650833 is a straight inhibitor whereas KT-474 is a degrader. Sentiment will not have been helped by the FDA placing Curis’s Irak-4 inhibitor emavusertib – focused on oncology – on clinical hold last month. Pfizer continues to list PF-06650833 as a rheumatoid arthritis project, but no active trials here are ongoing.

Selected Irak-4 projects in clinical development
ProjectCompanyMechanismStatus
GS-5718GileadIrak-4 inhibitorPh2 in rheumatoid arthritis
Zimlovisertib/ PF-06650833PfizerIrak-4 inhibitorPh2 combo in rheumatoid arthritis completed; discontinued for hidradenitis suppurativa without revealing ph2 data
Emavusertib/ CA-4948CurisIrak-4 inhibitorPh1/2 lymphoma study on partial US hold
R289 (R835 prodrug)RigelIrak-1 & 4 inhibitorPh1 for myelodysplastic syndromes
BAY1830839BayerIrak-4 inhibitorPh1 in autoimmune disease
KT-474/ SAR444656Kymera/SanofiIrak-4 degraderPh1 for atopic dermatitis/hidradenitis suppurativa
KT-413KymeraIrak-4 imidPh1 for lymphoma
EVO101Evommune (ex Lilly)Irak-4 inhibitorPh1 volunteer study started Mar 2022
Source: EvaluatePharma & clinicaltrials.gov.

https://www.evaluate.com/vantage/articles/news/snippets/irak-4-approach-has-wobble