Aptose Initiates TUSCANY Phase 1/2 Study for Newly Diagnosed AML Patients to Receive Tuspetinib-based Triplet Therapy

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Aptose Biosciences, Inc.
Aptose Biosciences, Inc.
  • TUSCANY study is open to enroll patients to receive TUS+VEN+AZA triplet at select US sites

  • Favorable safety and broad clinical activity make tuspetinib an ideal agent to combine with venetoclax and azacitidine to potentially address larger AML populations

  • Study execution update is expected during ASH 2024

SAN DIEGO and TORONTO, Nov. 20, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Aptose Biosciences Inc. (“Aptose” or the “Company”) (NASDAQ: APTO, TSX: APS), a clinical-stage precision oncology company developing highly differentiated oral targeted agents to treat hematologic malignancies, today announced initiation of the TUSCANY study, tuspetinib (TUS) in combination therapy with azacitidine (AZA) and venetoclax (VEN) as a frontline triplet combination therapy for patients newly diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia, or AML. The trial is being conducted at multiple U.S. clinical sites.

Tuspetinib is being developed for frontline AML therapy as part of the TUS+VEN+AZA triplet for newly diagnosed AML patients ineligible to receive intensive chemotherapy. Tuspetinib, a convenient once daily oral agent that potently targets SYK, FLT3, mutated KIT, JAK1/2, and RSK2 kinases, avoids many typical toxicity concerns observed with other agents and has the potential to treat the larger AML populations, not just narrow subpopulations. In the recently conducted Phase 1/2 APTIVATE trial in a very ill and heavily pre-treated relapsed or refractory (R/R) AML population, tuspetinib as a single agent (TUS) and in combination with venetoclax (TUS+VEN) safely achieved broad activity across various difficult-to-treat AML subpopulations. This included patients with prior-VEN, prior-FLT3 inhibitor (FLT3i) and prior-hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) therapies, those with highly adverse genetics - including mutations in TP53 and RAS genes, and those with mutated or unmutated (wildtype) FLT3 genes.

“Initiation of the trial is a key milestone for Aptose. AML treatment has rapidly shifted to combination therapies, and we are pleased to include tuspetinib as part of TUS+VEN+AZA triplet combination therapy in patients with newly-diagnosed AML – representing a new patient population for TUS,” said William G. Rice, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer. “We thank our investigators for their enthusiasm and our clinical team for activating the TUSCANY triplet study. As one of our investigators noted, if TUS brings added efficacy to frontline treatment of a broad array of AML patients without the added toxicities that are plaguing some other agents, we may have a game changer in TUS.”