Positive Phase II Clinical Data For Clavis Pharma's Elacytarabine Presented At ASH Annual MeetingMain Category: Lymphoma / Leukemia / MyelomaAlso Included In: Cancer / Oncology | Clinical Trials / Drug Trials Article Date: 07 Dec 2009 Clavis Pharma ASA (OSE: CLAVIS) announces that positive clinical data from its Phase II study with its lead cancer product candidate elacytarabine in patients with late-stage acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) was presented at the 51st American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting in New Orleans, LA, USA. Elacytarabine is a novel, patented, lipid-conjugated form of the anti-cancer drug cytarabine (Ara-C) that has the potential to improve treatment outcomes in patients with AML and other haematological malignancies (leukaemias). Elacytarabine has Orphan Drug Designation in the USA and Europe for the treatment of AML. The poster entitled "A Phase II Multicenter Study with Elacytarabine as Second Salvage Therapy in Patients with AML" was presented by Susan O'Brien, M.D. of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, in collaboration with researchers at other leading cancer centres and Clavis Pharma. This is the first time clinical results of this trial for all 61 patients have been presented at a leading cancer congress. The data and analyses from the multicentre open-label trial showed elacytarabine to have a significantly superior survival benefit compared to published clinical outcome data for 594 late-stage AML patients receiving investigators choice of treatment[1]. The results confirm the positive findings from the trial announced in June 2009. Key results for elacytarabine compared to published clinical data are
Clavis Pharma has also received approval to enrol patients in a Phase II study of elacytarabine in combination with idarubicin in AML patients who have failed their first course of treatment. In addition to evaluating survival in all patients, the studies will analyze patients' expression levels of the hENT1 tumour protein. The hENT1 (human equilibrative nucleoside transporter 1) cell membrane transporter is believed to be critical for cytarabine entry into tumour cells, whereas elacytarabine enters and kills tumour cells in a hENT1-independent manner. The goal is to demonstrate that the efficacy of elacytarabine is independent of the patient's hENT1 status. Geir Christian Melen, CEO of Clavis Pharma, commented: "These positive clinical results give us great confidence that elacytarabine could improve the treatment of late-stage AML patients, a group for which there are few effective therapeutic options. We look forward to starting a randomised, controlled Phase III trial to further demonstrate the benefit that we have already seen with elacytarabine in treating these patients. Mr Melen added, "The results represent an important proof of concept for our approach to developing improved cancer drugs based on our Lipid Vector Technology. This approach was recently validated in our $380 million deal with Clovis Oncology for CP-4126 to treat pancreatic and other solid tumours. Both elacytarabine and CP-4126 are designed using LVT to bypass the hENT1 transporter mechanism that limits the efficacy of cytarabine and gemcitabine, respectively. We are excited about the potential of both these drugs and also that, as a result of the deal with Clovis, sufficient resources are available to drive the clinical programmes forward." Extended survival, improved remissions In the Phase II study, 61 patients (41 male and 20 female) with late stage AML who failed to respond or relapsed after two separate rounds of treatments received third-line therapy (also called second salvage) with intravenous elacytarabine. A dose of 2000 mg/m2/day was given as continuous infusion for five days. The response to treatment was compared with a detailed historical outcome analysis of 594 similar second salvage AML patients, who were treated at the MD Anderson Cancer Center (Houston, TX, USA) (published by Giles et al, Cancer 2005;104:547-54). Median overall survival in the elacytarabine study was an impressive three times that of the historical control patients (5.3 months vs. 1.5 months). The 6 month survival rate was 44%. In addition, 9 patients responded to elacytarabine with a complete remission (CR) or complete remission without full recovery of platelet counts (CRp) as assessed by the investigator, representing an overall remission rate of 14.8 per cent. By contrast, the expected remission rate for similar group of patients, matched for prognostic factors as described by Giles et al. was only 2.5 per cent. Using a pre-defined statistical analysis method, the improvement in outcome was statistically highly significant (corresponding to p<0.0001). In addition to the 9 patients with a complete remission, 5 patients responded to elacytarabine with a partial response. Elacytarabine was relatively well tolerated, also by elderly patients, and 30 day all cause mortality following treatment was substantially lower than published data for existing therapies (13 per cent vs. 25 per cent). Out of the 61 patients treated with elacytarabine, 10 were referred for stem cell transplantation following treatment, including some patients in complete remission and others with a more modest level of clinical benefit. Stem cell transplantation represents a potential cure for life for these patients. About Leukaemia Approximately 300,000 new cases of leukaemia are diagnosed globally each year, resulting in around 220,000 deaths. Leukaemia represents a market with high unmet medical needs, which may open for accelerated approval processes to expedite market access for new drugs. It is a segmented market covering a broad variety of disorders. A major clinical concern is the high rate of disease recurrence. The five-year survival for the most common acute leukaemia type, acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), is in the range of 5-10% for treated elderly patients, and approximately 30% for treated younger adults. The AML market is estimated to be a multi-hundred USD market and is expected to grow significantly over the coming years. [1] Giles, F et al, Outcome of patients with acute myelogenous leukemia after second salvage therapy. Cancer (2005)104: 547-554 Source Clavis Pharma Original article posted on Medical News Today. Articles not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today Medical News Today publishes the latest health news and health videos for consumers and health professionals. It has a searchable archive of over 100,000 health news articles. < back to medical news
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