Positive Results Seen in Trial Investigating Nadunolimab Plus Chemotherapy for Advanced Pancreatic Cancer

Article

The phase 1/2a trial reported favorable efficacy data in the first-line setting when compared with existing historical results for treating advanced pancreatic cancer.

Positive efficacy results were recently announced regarding nadunolimab (CAN04) plus gemcitabine/nab-paclitaxel to treat patients with advanced pancreatic ductal adenocarinoma (PDAC), according to an announcement from Cantargia AB, the company responsible for the research.

The ongoing, open-label, phase 1/2a CANFOUR trial (NCT03267316) enrolled 36 patients with advanced PDAC, reporting the early efficacy data for the combination treatment in the first-line setting, which compares favorably to the existing historical control data.

“These data are intriguing and indicate that addition of CAN04 to standard chemotherapy generates beneficial long-term effects for patients with advanced pancreatic cancer,” coordinating investigator of the trial, Professor Ahmad Awada at Institute Jules Bordet, Brussels, Belgium, said in a press release. “Antitumor effects in the form of pseudoprogression-like events, as well as decrease in serious side effects such as neuropathy and fatigue are unique features in this trial.”

Of the 33 patients who were available for efficacy analysis, the median progression-free survival per iRECIST was 7.8 months, with a median overall survival of 12.6 months. At the analysis, 58% of patients were still alive. More, 5 of those patients benefitted from treatment continuation after initial progressive disease, with either shrinking or stable tumor size.

An additional 9 patients experienced a confirmed partial response with a median duration of response of 6.8 months. Antitumor activity of the combination was confirmed via retrospective central review of CT scans, showing 8 confirmed responses.

The safety profile included some adverse effects, although the effects were manageable and in line with previously reported safety data from nadunolimab and chemotherapy. The analysis found grade 3/4 neutropenia (67%) and grade 3 febrile neutropenia (17%) were more prevalent than the historical data suggest, while grade 3/4 neuropathy (0%) and grade 3 fatigue (6%) were less common.

“The positive results support previous findings that CAN04 may enhance the efficacy of various chemotherapies,” Göran Forsberg, CEO, at Cantargia, said in a press release. “We are therefore very pleased with the outcome of this trial and are preparing next development steps of CAN04 to meet the high medical need in pancreatic cancer.”

Currently, the CANFOUR trial has recruited up to an additional 40 patients as a part of its extension phase to generate further data on lower dosing, the pharmacodynamics of the combination, and to strengthen the clinical data set prior to pivotal trials.

Reference:

Cantargia reports positive results in ongoing phase IIa clinical trial in pancreatic cancer using nadunolimab and chemotherapy. News release. Cantargia AB. Published May 19, 2021. Accessed May 27, 2021. https://bit.ly/3fOq3r0

Recent Videos
Pancreatic cancer is projected to become the second-leading cause of cancer-related deaths by 2030 in the United States.
Differences in pancreatic cancer responses to treatment elicits a need to better educate patients on expectations in treatment, particularly chemotherapy.
Increasing patient awareness of modifiable risk factors for pancreatic cancer may help mitigate incidence of pancreatic cancers.
It may be crucial to test every patient for markers such as BRAF V600E mutations, NRG1 fusions, and KRAS G12C mutations to help manage pancreatic cancers.
Tanios S. Bekaii-Saab, MD, emphasizes the idea of moving targeted therapies to earlier lines of treatment to further improve outcomes in pancreatic cancer.
Experts from Vanderbilt University Medical Center emphasize gathering a second opinion to determine if a tumor is resectable in patients with pancreatic cancer.
Experts from Vanderbilt University Medical Center discuss the use of intraoperative radiation therapy in a 64-year-old patient with pancreatic cancer.
Investigators are assessing the use of IORT in patients with borderline resectable or unresectable pancreatic cancer as part of the phase 2 PACER trial.
Kamran Idrees, MD, MSCI, MMHC, FACS, discusses how factors such as vessel involvement can influence the decision to proceed with surgical therapy.
Milad Baradaran, PhD, DABR, outlines the design of Mobetron as an option for administering intraoperative radiation therapy in pancreatic cancer care.
Related Content