ALX Oncology Reports ASPEN-03 and ASPEN-04 Phase 2 Trials Evaluating Evorpacept with a Checkpoint Inhibitor for the Treatment of Head and Neck Cancers Did Not Meet Primary Endpoints

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ALX Oncology
ALX Oncology
  • In ASPEN-03 and ASPEN-04 trials, efficacy data do not support advancing evorpacept in combination with Merck’s anti-PD-1 therapy, KEYTRUDA® (pembrolizumab), into a registrational study

  • Company remains confident in continuing to pursue evorpacept in multiple clinical trials, based on the different mechanism of evorpacept in combination with anti-cancer antibodies, as evidenced by durable clinical response and consistent safety data in prior clinical trials

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, April 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- ALX Oncology Holdings Inc., (“ALX Oncology” or the “Company”) (Nasdaq: ALXO), a clinical-stage biotechnology company advancing a pipeline of novel therapies designed to treat cancer and extend patients’ lives, today announced topline data from its Phase 2 ASPEN-03 and ASPEN-04 clinical trials. The company’s investigational CD47-blocker evorpacept, when added to Merck’s (known as MSD outside of the US and Canada) anti-PD-1 therapy, KEYTRUDA® (pembrolizumab) with or without chemotherapy, did not meet the primary endpoints in the ASPEN-03 and ASPEN-04 trials of improved objective response rates (ORR) as compared to historical controls of pembrolizumab alone and pembrolizumab with chemotherapy, respectively, as a first-line treatment in patients with advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). The combination of evorpacept and pembrolizumab with or without chemotherapy in ASPEN-03 and ASPEN-04 demonstrated a manageable safety profile and was consistent with what has been previously reported for pembrolizumab and chemotherapy in this setting. Although the company will no longer pursue evorpacept in combination with pembrolizumab in HNSCC, multiple clinical trials of evorpacept in combination with anti-cancer antibodies will continue based on established proof-of-concept.

Evorpacept blocks the ‘don’t eat me’ signal transmitted by CD47 on the surface of cancer cells that these cells use to evade detection by the immune system. As its primary mechanism of action, evorpacept is uniquely designed to stimulate macrophages to selectively attack cancer cells and not healthy cells, when combined with active anti-cancer antibodies. This mechanism has translated into durable clinical responses and a well-tolerated safety profile in HER2-positive gastric and HER2-positive breast cancer clinical trials. To further explore the benefit in this setting, evorpacept is currently being evaluated in combination with various anti-cancer antibodies in colorectal cancer, breast cancer, non-Hodgkin lymphoma and multiple myeloma.