First Clinical Data for Arcus Biosciences’ HIF-2a Inhibitor, Casdatifan, Showed Promising Clinical Activity and Tumor Shrinkage in Patients with Metastatic Kidney Cancer

In This Article:

  • Objective response rate of 34% (2 responses pending confirmation) and 25% (confirmed) in the 100mg daily dose expansion cohort (n=32) of ARC-20, a Phase 1/1b study of casdatifan in metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC)

  • Low rate of primary progression (19%) and high rate of disease control (81%) was observed in the 100mg expansion cohort with many of those patients still on treatment

  • Arcus will host a conference call to discuss these results, including results from the 50mg expansion cohort, at 5:00 AM PT / 8:00 AM ET today

HAYWARD, Calif., October 24, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Arcus Biosciences, Inc. (NYSE:RCUS), a clinical-stage, global biopharmaceutical company focused on developing differentiated molecules and combination therapies for patients with cancer, today presented the first clinical activity data for casdatifan, a HIF-2a inhibitor with best-in-class potential, in an oral plenary session by Dr. Toni K. Choueiri, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute at the 2024 EORTC-NCI-AACR Symposium on Molecular Targets and Cancer Therapeutics in Barcelona, Spain.

"Based on our experience in the ARC-20 study, we have seen casdatifan’s ability to quickly bring tumor growth under control and its high response and disease control rates," said Toni K. Choueiri, M.D., director of the Lank Center for Genitourinary (GU) Oncology at Dana-Farber, the Jerome and Nancy Kohlberg chair and professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and lead investigator of ARC-20. "Based on these data, casdatifan has the potential to be a future treatment option for kidney cancer. I am particularly interested in planned research into novel combinations for casdatifan in both first- and second-line ccRCC."

"In the 100mg daily dose-expansion cohort of ARC-20, casdatifan showed encouraging results, particularly a low primary progressive disease rate and very durable responses. This was accomplished with a manageable safety profile," said Dimitry Nuyten, M.D., Ph.D., chief medical officer of Arcus. "These data support the potential for casdatifan to be a best-in-class HIF-2a inhibitor for the treatment of ccRCC. We look forward to initiating our first Phase 3 study for casdatifan, PEAK-1, in the first half of 2025, and expanding our development program into the first-line setting with a novel combination, as well as into other ccRCC subpopulations."

ARC-20 is a Phase 1/1b dose-escalation and -expansion study. In the dose escalation (20mg to 200mg) portion of the study, the safety profile was comparable across the doses; there were no dose-limiting toxicities, and the maximum tolerated dose was not reached at daily doses of up to 150 mg (200 mg portion of the study is currently ongoing). The 100 mg daily dose (50 mg BID [twice daily]) was selected for dose expansion, and casdatifan was evaluated in patients with metastatic ccRCC who had progressed on at least two prior lines of therapy, including both an anti-PD-1 and a tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy (n=33). The patient population was heavily pre-treated: 52% had received at least three prior lines of therapy; 26% had received at least four prior lines of therapy; and 61% had an International Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma Database Consortium (IMDC) risk factor of intermediate.