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Processa Pharmaceuticals Presents Two Abstracts at the AACR Annual Meeting 2024 Including New Data on the NGC-Cap Phase 1b Trial

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Processa Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Processa Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

NGC-Cap demonstrated greater 5-FU exposure than monotherapy capecitabine at a significantly lower dose with a favorable clinical safety profile

NGC-Cap holds potential for improved efficacy in more patients due to an increase in distribution of 5-FU to cancer cells

Phase 1b study final results to be released upon database lock

HANOVER, Md., April 11, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Processa Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Nasdaq: PCSA) (“Processa” or the “Company”), a clinical-stage pharmaceutical company focused on developing the next generation of chemotherapeutic drugs with improved efficacy and safety, presented two abstracts at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2024, including new Phase 1b data on its Next Generation Capecitabine (NGC-Cap) product. These abstracts are available in the Publications section of Processa’s website.

The NGC-Cap Phase 1b trial evaluated ascending doses of capecitabine when combined with a fixed dose of PCS6422 in patients with advanced, relapsed, or refractory progressive gastrointestinal cancer. These patients had to relapse from or fail all other treatments. NGC-Cap demonstrated greater 5-FU (5-fluorouracil) exposure and lower fluoro-beta-alanine (FBAL) exposure with a better or similar side effect profile compared with monotherapy capecitabine.

“The most recent data for the Phase 1b NGC-Cap study presented at AACR highlight NGC-Cap’s ability to distribute more 5-FU to cancer cells with 5-10 times greater systemic exposure than when capecitabine is administered alone. As expected with a higher systemic exposure, there was a greater incidence of adverse events with NGC-Cap. However, these adverse events were less dose limiting than seen with other 5-FU metabolites,” stated David Young, PharmD, Ph.D., President of Research and Development at Processa. “This Phase 1b study is ongoing due to continued patient response and we plan to release final trial data once the database is locked. Given we have identified the recommended Phase 2 doses and the maximum tolerated dose, we look forward to advancing NGC-Cap into a Phase 2 trial in breast cancer later this year. As agreed to with the FDA, our data in past and ongoing studies will be used to support the breast cancer Phase 2 trial, which streamlines the regulatory path for NCG-Cap.”

The poster presentation, titled “Next generation capecitabine (NGC-Cap) in Phase 1b trial significantly increases 5-FU exposure while improving safety profile compared to capecitabine,” reported the following more recent findings:

  • 18 patients were enrolled in the first four dose levels of capecitabine in NGC-Cap

  • The 5-FU exposure, expressed as the area under the 5-FU plasma concentration curve or AUC (geometric mean, CV%), for the two highest doses cohorts of 150 and 225 mg twice-daily NGC-Cap were 4,551 (26.8%) and 6,889 (41.4%) ng-hr/ml, respectively, which is approximately 5-10 times the AUC (0-inf) of 698 (33%) previously reported for a larger dose of approximately 2,250 mg twice-daily of monotherapy capecitabine (Reigner 1998)

  • Similarly, the 5-FU maximum plasma concentrations (Cmax) for these two cohorts were greater at 1.5 times the Cmax of monotherapy capecitabine

  • As expected, with the greater 5-FU exposure for all the NGC-Cap cohorts, the incidence of anabolite related side effects was also greater than monotherapy treatment, suggesting that more drug was distributed to duplicating cancer cells and normal cells

  • The extremely low FBAL catabolite formation and exposure across all NGC-Cap doses resulted in the incidence of catabolite related side effects to be less with only one patient having Grade 1 hand-foot-syndrome, an FBAL related side effect often requiring dose modifications