A phase 1/2 open-label study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and preliminary antitumor activity of OTX-2002 as a single agent and in combination with standard of care in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and other solid tumor types known for association with the MYC oncogene (MYCHELANGELO I).

Authors

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Ildefonso I Rodriguez-Rivera

NEXT Oncology, San Antonio, TX;

Ildefonso I Rodriguez-Rivera , Ting-Hui Wu , Rachel Ciotti , William Senapedis , Kaitlyn Sullivan , Jeff Z Gao , Sangeetha Palakurthi , Thomas McCauley , Yan Moore

Organizations

NEXT Oncology, San Antonio, TX; , Omega Therapeutics, Cambridge, MA;

Research Funding

Pharmaceutical/Biotech Company
Omega Therapeutics

Background: MYC, or c-MYC, is a master regulator of gene expression that controls cell growth and proliferation. Dysregulation of MYC is frequently identified in various cancer types, including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), where it is overexpressed in up to 70% viral and alcohol-related disease.1 While MYC represents an attractive therapeutic target, it has historically been considered undruggable due to a lack of a structured binding pocket and its tightly autoregulated expression. OTX-2002 is a first-in-class, engineered and programable mRNA therapeutic called Omega Epigenomic Controllers (OECs) that modulates MYC gene expression pre-transcriptionally by creating epigenetic marks at two different structural and regulatory elements within the insulated genomic domain where MYC resides. In vitro studies have demonstrated that downregulation of MYC through OTX-2002 led to loss of viability in HCC cells while sparing normal hepatocytes. In HCC xenograft mouse models, OTX-2002 demonstrated anti-tumor activity as monotherapy and in combinations with standard of care therapies in HCC.2Methods: OTX-2002 is being evaluated in an open-label, non-randomized, phase 1/2 study (MYCHELANGELO I) in patients with HCC and other advanced solid tumor types (NCT05497453). The study consists of two parts. Part 1 dose escalation explores ascending doses of intravenous OTX-2002 monotherapy given every 2 weeks to identify dose limiting toxicities, maximum tolerated dose, and recommended dose for expansion (RDE) in patients with HCC and other solid tumors using a classic 3+3 design. Upon identification of the RDE, a monotherapy expansion in advanced HCC patients is planned to explore the preliminary anti-tumor activity of OTX-2002. Part 2 will evaluate OTX-2002 in combination with HCC standard of care in the same HCC population as that of Part 1 expansion. The safety of OTX-2002 at the selected dose in combination with a tyrosine kinase inhibitor or immune checkpoint inhibitor will be evaluated in a safety run-in; expansion will follow to identify the preliminary anti-tumor activity of the combinations. Key eligibility criteria for HCC patients include: 1) Barcelona Clinical Liver Cancer (BCLC) stage B or C disease, 2) Child-Pugh A liver function, 3) received at least 1 prior systemic therapy. The MYCHELANGELO I study began enrollment in August 2022, and Part 1 dose escalation is ongoing in the US. References: 1. Lin et al. World J Hepatol. 2010; 2: 16–20. 2. Senapedis et al. Ann Oncol. 2022; 33: S355. Clinical trial information: NCT05497453.

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2023 ASCO Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium

Session Type

Trials in Progress Poster Session

Session Title

Trials in Progress Poster Session B: Cancers of the Pancreas, Small Bowel, and Hepatobiliary Tract

Track

Pancreatic Cancer,Hepatobiliary Cancer,Neuroendocrine/Carcinoid,Small Bowel Cancer

Sub Track

Therapeutics

Clinical Trial Registration Number

NCT05497453

Citation

J Clin Oncol 41, 2023 (suppl 4; abstr TPS627)

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2023.41.4_suppl.TPS627

Abstract #

TPS627

Poster Bd #

N16

Abstract Disclosures