공시 • Dec 12
Onkure Announces Encouraging Preliminary Safety, Tolerability, and Pharmacokinetic Data from its First-In-Human PIKture-01 Trial of OKI-219
OnKure Therapeutics, Inc. announced encouraging safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetic data from the ongoing first-in-human trial of OKI-219, a potential best-in-class, mutant-selective PI3KaH1047R inhibitor. OKI-219 was well tolerated across all dose levels with no hyperglycemia, and only grade 1 treatment-related adverse events were reported. No dose interruptions, delays, reductions, or discontinuations were reported for any adverse events (AEs). OKI-219 dosed at 900 mg twice daily shows steady-state exposure levels with near-continuous coverage of the in vivo EC 80 for pAKT inhibition. These data are consistent with the Company’s preclinical data and support the continued development of OKI-219. In addition, the Company announced new pre-clinical data that show OKI-219’s synergistic activity, inducing regressions, in combination with SERD + CDK4/6 inhibitors, potentially paving the way for clinical trials in multiple lines of therapy. These clinical and preclinical data are scheduled to be presented during poster sessions at the 2024 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium on December 12, 2024. Preliminary Safety Data (Data cutoff date for announcement: October 28, 2024. Patients have been treated with OKI-219 at three dose levels as a single agent: 300 mg BID, 600 mg BID, and 900 mg BID. Across all three levels, a total of 17 patients have been dosed, including 11 patients with HR+/HER2- breast cancer, two with HER2+ breast cancer, two with colorectal cancer, one with triple negative breast cancer and one with squamous cell carcinoma in the single-agent dose escalation. OKI-219 has been generally well tolerated, with no dose-limiting toxicities, dose interruptions, or dose reductions required. The most common TRAEs were Grade 1 diarrhea (N=4), Grade 1 nausea (N=2) and Grade 1 pruritus (N=2). Pharmacokinetic and Selectivity Profile, OKI-219 has shown favorable PK data that support pharmacologically relevant exposures, even at the lowest assessed dose levels, with a safety profile that suggests little or no inhibition of wild-type PI3Ka. At steady state, the exposures of OKI-219 exceed exposures associated with robust antitumor activity in preclinical models. There are 13 patients who have received a =600 mg dose twice a day that remain in the study. In addition, two patients with HR+/HER2- breast cancer (BR) who received the 300 mg dose showed prolonged stable disease, including one patient that sustained >95% reduction in PIK3CAH1047R ctDNA and remains on treatment for more than seven months. PIKture-01 Trial, PIKture-01 is a global, multi-center, first-in-human phase 1a/1b study evaluating OKI-219 as monotherapy and in combination with fulvestrant or trastuzumab in subjects with advanced solid tumors including breast cancer harboring a PI3KaH1047R mutation. In Phase 1a, subjects receive escalating oral doses of OKI-219 starting at 300 mg BID continuously. Phase 1b is assessing OKI-219 in combination with fulvestrant in patients with HR+/HER2- breast cancer, or with trastuzumab in patients with HER2+ breast cancer. Preclinical in vivo data show that OKI-219 used in combination with standard-of-care therapies for mutant-selected solid tumors, including breast cancers, showed potent anti-tumor activity with excellent tolerability at doses well above those needed for tumor regressions in those models. Specifically, OKI-219 shows strong combination activity in doublet with SERDs and in triplet with SERD + CDK4/6 inhibitors. Additional preclinical combination studies are ongoing. The Company believes OKI-219’s selectivity could provide increased safety both as a single agent and in combination. OnKure is actively pursuing multiple additional early-stage discovery programs that target oncogenic mutations of PI3Ka. The Company has broadened the expectations of its next-generation program beyond PI3KaH1047 mutations to target all the most common PI3Ka mutations (i.e., H1047R, E545K, and E542K). The Company expects to announce a pan-mutant development candidate in the first half of 2025. Additionally, the Company is developing a highly selective allosteric inhibitor molecule specifically targeting the PI3Ka E545K and E542K mutations (a/k/a helical domain mutations or e-mutants) and expects to announce a development candidate in 2026. Overall, the aim of the Company’s discovery engine is to deliver highly selective drug candidates that preserve wild-type PI3Ka while effectively targeting the majority of PI3Ka-mutated cancers, in breast and other cancers.