Repare Therapeutics Presents Initial Clinical Data from the Phase 1/2 TRESR and ATTACC Trials Evaluating Camonsertib in Combination with Three PARP Inhibitors at the 2023 AACR Annual Meeting
Repare Therapeutics presented initial data from its ongoing Phase 1/2 TRESR clinical trial for camonsertib (RP-3500), an ATR inhibitor, in combination with PARPis at the 2023 AACR Annual Meeting. The trials show a 48% clinical benefit rate across various tumor types, especially in late-line ovarian cancer with a 58% clinical benefit rate and a median progression-free survival of about 7 months. Early ctDNA responses indicated a strong antitumor activity, with 66% of evaluable patients responding positively. The treatment showed a favorable safety profile with manageable toxicities. Repare is focused on optimizing doses and expanding studies in different tumor types as part of its collaboration with Roche.
- 48% clinical benefit rate across various tumor types.
- In late-line ovarian cancer, 32% overall response and 58% clinical benefit rate.
- Median progression-free survival of approximately 7 months in ovarian cancer patients.
- 66% early ctDNA molecular response rate confirming antitumor activity.
- Favorable safety profile with manageable toxicities.
- None.
Camonsertib PARPi combinations demonstrated
Combination results showed most benefit in late-line ovarian cancer demonstrating
Early ctDNA molecular responses in
The data involving novel combinations of low doses of camonsertib and three different PARPis are featured today at the 2023 AACR Annual Meeting in a clinical plenary session titled, “Safety and efficacy of three PARP inhibitors (PARPi) combined with the ataxia telangiectasia- and Rad3-related kinase inhibitor (ATRi) camonsertib in patients (pts) with solid tumors harboring DNA damage response (DDR) alterations” (abstract presentation number CT018). This study population comprised patients with a broad range of historically difficult to treat tumors, including patients with platinum-resistant tumors, patients who had either recurred or progressed during or after treatment with PARPis, and patients who had developed known BRCA-reversion mutations.
“We see promise in the camonsertib-PARPi combinations when administered concomitantly, at low doses across tumor types, especially in recurrent ovarian cancer given that nearly all had recurred after prior PARPi treatment. We are particularly encouraged by the depth of response and duration of treatment,” said
“We previously established a promising safety and early efficacy profile of camonsertib as a monotherapy and this year’s data at AACR further support camonsertib as a partner for combinational regimens and provides a clear rationale for further development of this compound,” said
Key Initial Findings from the TRESR Phase 1/2 and ATTACC 1b/2 PARPi Combination Studies:
TRESR (NCT04497116) is a first-in-human, multi-center, open-label Phase 1/2 dose-escalation and expansion study, designed to establish the recommended Phase 2 dose and schedule, evaluate safety and pharmacokinetics and identify preliminary anti-tumor activity associated with camonsertib, given alone and in combination with talazoparib or in combination with gemcitabine.
ATTACC (NCT04972110) is a first-in-human, multi-center, open-label Phase 1b/2 dose-escalation and expansion study, designed to evaluate safety and pharmacokinetics and identify preliminary anti-tumor activity associated with camonsertib in combination with niraparib or olaparib.
The clinical plenary session described initial combination Phase 1/2 results from 107 patients, of which 90 patients were evaluable for efficacy treated at least 13 weeks prior to the data cutoff of
Key highlights from the data presented at the 2023 AACR Annual Meeting include:
-
Camonsertib combination resulted in durable clinical benefit across tumor types and different genomic alterations, regardless of choice of PARPi and presence of platinum resistance. Overall clinical benefit rate (CBR) for all patients was
48% . Patients with platinum-resistant tumors had an overall response rate (ORR) of12% and CBR of49% , and benefited similarly to non-platinum-resistant tumors (ORR13% , CBR46% ). -
Compelling results were observed particularly in patients with advanced ovarian cancer (n = 19). In these patients, overall response was
32% , CBR was58% and median progression-free survival (mPFS) was approximately 7 months with treatment >16 weeks and ongoing in 9 patients. -
Early ctDNA molecular responses in
66% (31/47) of evaluable patients confirms antitumor activity of low dose, intermittent PARPi + ATRi therapy. The molecular response rate (MRR) was significantly higher in patients with clinical benefit (83% ) compared to those without (48% ; p=0.015), confirming treatment effect. Molecular responses were observed in patients with prior PARPi exposure (57% ) and platinum resistance (64% ). -
Camonsertib combinations appear to be well tolerated. Dose limiting toxicity (DLTs) in 68 patients treated with the proposed combination doses were related to myelotoxicity only (Grade 3+ anemia
3% , thrombocytopenia6% , neutropenia7% , and febrile neutropenia3% ). No prophylactic growth factors were required when administering the PARPis at evaluated doses.
Additional relevant presentations at AACR:
Title: Characterization of CCNE1 amplifications and associated genomic features in ovarian and uterine cancers
Session: Biomarkers of Therapeutic Benefit 5,
Abstract Number: 5469
Title: Tumor heterogeneity of CCNE1 copy number assessed by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) in ovarian and uterine cancers and correlation with cyclin E protein expression
Session: Biomarkers of Therapeutic Benefit 2,
Abstract Number: 2132
Title: Targeting PKMYT1 kinase is an effective treatment strategy in triple negative breast cancers with low molecular weight cyclin E (LMW-E) expression
Session: Biomarkers of Therapeutic Benefit 1,
Abstract Number: 950
Title: Investigating Wee1 and Myt1 combined inhibition as a potential cancer therapeutic strategy
Session: Combination Therapies for Cancer,
Abstract Number: 5511
About Repare Therapeutics’ SNIPRx® Platform
Repare’s SNIPRx® platform is a genome-wide CRISPR-based screening approach that utilizes proprietary isogenic cell lines to identify novel and known synthetic lethal gene pairs and the corresponding patients who are most likely to benefit from the Company’s therapies based on the genetic profile of their tumors. Repare’s platform enables the development of precision therapeutics in patients whose tumors contain one or more genomic alterations identified by SNIPRx® screening, in order to selectively target those tumors in patients most likely to achieve clinical benefit from resulting product candidates.
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