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本帖最后由 Jane 于 2015-4-22 12:09 编辑
http://www.streetinsider.com/Cor ... nkage/10472251.html
Immunomedics (IMMU) Announces Significant Data from Sacituzumab Govitecan in Tumor Shrinkage
Immunomedics (NASDAQ: IMMU) announced that, in a mid-stage clinical study, a multitude of patients with late stage solid cancers showed significant and durable tumor shrinkage after receiving treatments with sacituzumab govitecan, the Company's lead antibody-directed chemotherapeutic agent in development. These include patients with metastatic triple-negative breast cancer whose cancers after treatment were no longer detected by computed tomography, a test commonly used to find and locate tumors, and to measure a patient's treatment response.
"All of these patients had failed many prior therapies for their cancers and were running out of options before being treated with sacituzumab govitecan," stated Dr. Alexander N. Starodub of the Indiana Health Center for Cancer Care, Goshen, Indiana, one of the Principal Investigators. "In this respect, we are very encouraged with the responses we are reporting at this year's Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research, especially in light of the fact that this novel agent is given to patients as a monotherapy, and not part of a drug cocktail. I believe sacituzumab govitecan has the potential to become a viable alternative for treating patients with advanced, metastatic solid cancers if these results are confirmed in a late-stage clinical trial," added Dr. Starodub.
At the time of analysis, a total of 184 patients with many different advanced, metastatic cancers were enrolled into the study. Dr. Starodub's oral presentation focused on interim responses from 130 patients having these four major solid cancer types: breast, lung, esophageal, and colorectal.
For patients with triple-negative breast cancer, 26% showed objective response to sacituzumab govitecan, with 2 having a complete disappearance of their tumors, or complete response, and 10 showing a 30% or better tumor reduction, which qualified them as partial responders in accordance with the rules set by the Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors (RECIST 1.1). Including patients with responses between less than 30% tumor shrinkage and less than 20% tumor increase, which are considered stable disease, the disease control rate was 74%. At present, 21 of these patients are continuing therapy.
Cancer Types (N*) Objective Response** Disease Control
Triple-Negative Breast (46) (2+10) (26%) 34 (74%)
Non-Small Cell Lung (19) 6 (32%) 14 (74%)
Small Cell Lung (20) 6 (30%) 11 (55%)
Esophageal (16) 2 (13%) 9 (56%)
* N represents the number of patients that are evaluable at this time for treatment response.
** Except with triple-negative breast cancer (2 patients with complete response), all objective responses are partial responses.
In lung cancer, the objective response rates were 32% and 30% for non-small-cell and small-cell lung cancers, respectively, and disease control rates were 74% and 55%, respectively. "These results compare very favorably to all other agents used in this disease and setting," commented Dr. Starodub. For the 18 patients with advanced cancer of the esophagus enrolled into the study, 16 were assessable for response, having an objective response rate of 13% and a disease control rate of 44%.
Also reported were results on 29 patients with colorectal cancer in early assessments of survival. The median length of time living without the disease getting worse from the beginning of their sacituzumab govitecan treatments was 3.9 months. The median length of survival from the start of treatment was 18.0 months. "These are very encouraging preliminary results for patients who had a median of 4 prior therapies for metastatic colorectal cancer, some as many as 8," remarked Dr. Starodub.
Commenting on these encouraging results, Ms. Cynthia L. Sullivan, President and Chief Executive Officer stated, "We are in discussion with FDA to formulate a registration pathway for sacituzumab govitecan to advance the agent to a Phase 3 registration trial." "We are completing the enrollment of additional patients with triple-negative breast cancer, non-small and small-cell lung cancers. Our ultimate goal is to develop the full potential of this important and valuable asset for the benefits of cancer patients by advancing it with a corporate partner," Ms. Sullivan concluded.
Sacituzumab govitecan was created by the Company for the therapy of solid cancers by selectively delivering the active anticancer drug, SN-38, to a target called TROP-2 that is produced in high amounts by cancer cells relative to normal tissues. These cancers include breast, lung, esophageal, stomach, colon, rectal, pancreatic, prostate, ovarian, urinary bladder, and uterine cancers.
SN-38 is formed in the body from irinotecan, a drug used in various combinations to treat patients with colorectal and other cancers. However, the process of converting irinotecan to the active SN-38 is inefficient, which lowers the efficacy of irinotecan. By attaching active SN-38 directly to a tumor-targeting antibody, as much as 136-times more SN-38 can be delivered directly to the tumor than when irinotecan is administered, without increasing the toxicity to the body at the same time.
Sacituzumab govitecan is well tolerated by patients. At the optimal doses of 8 and 10 mg/kg, only 7% of patients required having dosing delayed due to adverse reactions, while dose reductions were experienced in only 15-16% of patients. Grades 3 and 4 adverse events occurring in more than 5% of patients include fatigue (5%), neutropenia (24%), and anemia (6%). Irinotecan shows an increased incidence of severe diarrhea (38%), neutropenia (31%), and neutropenic fever (8%). Further, despite repeated injections, no patient produced any antibody against sacituzumab govitecan.
In addition to Dr. Starodub, other clinical investigators participated in this multicenter trial are Drs. Allyson J. Ocean, Linda T. Vahdat, Scott T. Tagawa, and Manish A. Shah, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY; Dr. Aditya Bardia, Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Drs. Michael J. Guarino and Gregory A. Masters, Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute, Newark, DE; Drs. Wells A. Messersmith and Jennifer S. Diamond, University of Colorado Cancer Center, Aurora, CO; Drs. Jordan Berlin and Ingrid A. Mayer, Vanderbilt-Ingra Cancer Center, Nashville, TN; Dr. Vincent J. Picozzi, Virginia Mason Cancer Center, Seattle, WA; and Drs. Sajeve S. Thomas and Rebecca Moroose, UF Health Cancer Center-Orlando Health, Orlando, FL. |