Sermonix Pharmaceuticals Shares Details of First-Ever Known Durable Complete Clinical Response in a Metastatic ER+/HER2- Breast Cancer Patient With an ESR1 Mutation After Prior CDK4/6 Inhibitor Treatment Via Single-Agent Hormonally Based Regimen

2022-09-17 10:43:22 By : Mr. Jeffrey Zhang

Presentation delivered at the ninth-annual Metastatic Breast Cancer Research Conference in Park City, Utah

Case was reported during Phase 2 study investigating efficacy of lasofoxifene, Sermonix’s lead investigational drug

COLUMBUS, Ohio, Sept. 14, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Sermonix Pharmaceuticals Inc., a privately held biopharmaceutical company developing innovative therapeutics to specifically treat ESR1-mutated metastatic breast and gynecological cancers, broadly shared a case report detailing the first-ever known finding of a durable complete response that could be characterized as complete clinical remission in a metastatic estrogen receptor-positive (ER+)/HER2- breast cancer patient with an ESR1 mutation after prior CDK4/6 inhibitor treatment upon participation in any single-agent hormonally based therapy.

The case report, “Durable Complete Remission of Metastatic ER+/HER2- Breast Cancer After Lasofoxifene Therapy,” was initially shared Sept. 9 at the ninth-annual Metastatic Breast Cancer Research Conference in Park City, Utah. Lasofoxifene is Sermonix’s lead investigational drug.

The durable complete response (CR) was reported during Sermonix’s Phase 2 Evaluation of Lasofoxifene in ESR1 Mutations (ELAINE 1, NCT03781063) study. The open-label, randomized study evaluated the efficacy of oral lasofoxifene versus intramuscular fulvestrant for the treatment of postmenopausal women with locally advanced or metastatic ER+/HER2- breast cancer with an ESR1 mutation and progression-free survival as the primary endpoint. Top-line ELAINE 1 data was presented Sept. 10 during the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) Congress 2022 in Paris. Although not statistically significant, the results of the study numerically favored lasofoxifene.

The patient was recruited to the ELAINE 1 study and started treatment on Dec. 16, 2020. Her first radiological assessment, eight weeks after lasofoxifene initiation via PET-FDG scan, revealed no pathological uptake in her pleural lesions, a sum diameter of 14 mm (55% reduction) and significant reduction of the bony lesion in the ilium with no new pathological findings. Scans at Week 16 revealed further improvement up to complete radiological disappearance of all measurable and non-measurable lesions. Radiological complete response was maintained at 80 weeks (June 29, 2022).

“Achieving a complete response in metastatic breast cancer with endocrine treatment post CDK4/6 inhibitor is exceedingly uncommon, particularly with single-agent endocrine therapy,” said Dr. Einav Nili Gal-Yam, M.D., Ph.D., ELAINE 1 principal investigator and head of the Breast Oncology Institute at Chaim Sheba Medical Center in Ramat Gan, Israel. “This is a very gratifying result, pointing to lasofoxifene’s potentially significant role in addressing the unmet needs of patients with ESR1 mutations. We look forward to the continued clinical development of this drug.”

About Lasofoxifene Lasofoxifene is an investigational, nonsteroidal selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM), which Sermonix licensed globally from Ligand Pharmaceuticals Inc. (NASDAQ: LGND) and has been studied in previous comprehensive Phase 1-3 non-oncology clinical trials in more than 15,000 postmenopausal women worldwide. Lasofoxifene’s bioavailability and activity in mutations of the estrogen receptor could potentially hold promise for patients who have acquired endocrine resistance due to ESR1 mutations, a common finding in the metastatic setting and an area of high unmet medical need. Lasofoxifene’s novel activity in ESR1 mutations was discovered at Duke University and Sermonix has exclusive rights to develop and commercialize the product in this area. Lasofoxifene, a potent, oral SERM could, if approved, play a critical role in the targeted precision medicine treatment of advanced ER+ breast cancer.

About Sermonix Sermonix Pharmaceuticals Inc. is a privately held biopharmaceutical company focused on the development of female-specific oncology products and is currently undertaking two Phase 2 clinical studies of lasofoxifene, its lead investigational drug. Sermonix Pharmaceuticals was founded in 2014 by David Portman, M.D., a leading clinical researcher and expert in women’s health, menopause and selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM) therapy. The Sermonix management team, led by Dr. Portman, has significant experience in all stages of the drug development and regulatory process. Paul Plourde, M.D., vice president of oncology clinical development, has many decades of experience in the oncology drug development arena. Barry Komm, Ph.D., chief scientific officer, is recognized for his expertise in SERM biology. Miriam Portman, M.D., is chief operating officer. Elizabeth Attias, M.M.Sc., Sc.D., chief strategy and development officer, has extensive experience in pharmaceutical drug commercialization. Simon Jenkins, Ph.D., vice president of operations, has over 30 years of experience in global drug development leadership. Sermonix non-executive chairman of the board is Anthony Wild, Ph.D., former president of both Parke-Davis Pharmaceuticals and Warner-Lambert’s Pharmaceutical Division. Learn more at SermonixPharma.com.

Contact information: Glenn Garmont LifeSci Advisors Managing Director, Investor Relations Corporate Communications ggarmont@lifesciadvisors.com 646-876-5521

A labor shortage at a pharmaceutical company along with increased demand left Adderall on back-order at many pharmacies across the country.

Stéphane Bancel discusses the company’s latest Covid shot and prospects for using mRNA in seasonal flu vaccines and personalized treatments for cancer

Intellia said Friday it knocked out the gene responsible for a rare and deadly swelling disorder. But CRISPR stocks sank.

How do you fix a forgetful memory? Neurologist shares brain exercises to keep memory sharp, including reading fiction, cooking from recipes and playing games.

Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE said Friday that the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) for the European Medicines Agency (EMA) has recommended the companies' COVID-19 vaccine Comirnaty be converted to standard, or "full," Marketing Authorization (MA) from conditional MA for all indications and formulations. The companies said the European Commission (EC) will review the CHMP recommendation and is expected to make a decision "soon." The vaccine has been granted MA by the EC to pre

J&J (JNJ) announces a new $5 billion stock buyback plan. CHMP recommends authorizing Pfizer's (PFE) Omicron BA.4 and BA.5 boosters in Europe.

Based on positive top-line data from phase III on its pentavalent meningococcal vaccine, Pfizer (PFE) intends to submit a regulatory application to the FDA seeking approval by year-end.

A San Francisco-based immunology company that wants to help eradicate infectious disease globally has expanded its footprint in St. Louis, opening a new $41 million office within the Cortex innovation district. It says the new facility will be critical to advancing research to treat several infectious diseases, including Covid-19.

Intellia Therapeutics said two of its experimental Crispr treatments produced positive results in early-stage trials.

In June, a Dallas area doctor who was feeling unwell wanted to use a saline IV bag she had gotten from her work to try to rehydrate. She tapped it into her veins while at home. Minutes later, she suffered a major medical event and died, court records say. Now, Raynaldo Rivera Ortiz Jr., an anesthesiologist at her surgical facility, faces federal charges for allegedly tampering with IV bags in a way that resulted in the death of his colleague as well as several other cardiac emergencies, accordin

Regeneron (REGN) and its partner Alnylam announce promising data from its ongoing phase I study evaluating ALN-HSD in healthy adults and NASH patients.

Two COVID-19 antibody therapies are no longer recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), on the basis that Omicron and the variant's latest offshoots have likely rendered them obsolete. On Thursday, WHO experts said they strongly advised against the use of the two therapies in patients with COVID-19, reversing previous conditional recommendations endorsing them, as part of a suite of recommendations published https://www.bmj.com/content/370/bmj.m3379 in the British Medical Journal. GSK and partner Vir Biotechnology's sotrovimab - which has generated billions in sales and became one of the British drugmaker's top sellers last year - was pulled off the U.S. market by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in April.

Lumakras had mixed results in a closely watched clinical trial comparing the drug to docetaxel. Analysts wonder if Mirati Therapeutics' drug will do better.

It should come as no surprise that Sen. Lindsey Graham is the one to expose one of the Republican Party’s biggest lies of late. | Opinion

Workers and employers stand to save on health-insurance premiums in the coming years as Medicare drug-pricing reforms recently passed by Congress spill over into the commercial market, and states piggybacking on the federal rules may amplify the impact, health policy experts say. Although the Inflation Reduction Act’s drug-pricing provisions focus on the federal health program for seniors, including requiring that the federal government negotiate prices for certain Medicare-covered drugs, a new analysis published since the law’s passage last month points to potential benefits for people in employer-sponsored health plans. One of the law’s provisions, requiring pharmaceutical companies to pay rebates to Medicare when drug prices rise faster than inflation, translates into about $31.5 billion in employer and employee premium and cost-sharing savings over the next nine years, according to an estimate from nonprofit research organization West Health Policy Center.

Xylazine, an animal tranquilizer, and nitazine, a powerful opioid, are increasingly found in the illicit drug supply.

COVID in seniors may be linked to a higher risk for Alzheimer's, according to a new study published in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease.

The latest clinical news from Bristol Myers Squibb (NYSE: BMY) was quite encouraging, sufficient to drive the pharmaceutical giant's stock higher on an otherwise uninspired day for the broader stock market. Bristol Myers Squibb's share price experienced a nearly 2% bump, a notably better showing than the S&P 500 index's more than 1% decline. Bristol Myers Squibb's good news from the lab was that its enduringly popular cancer drug Opdivo did quite well in its latest round of testing.

"If we are forcing millions of people into this world, we as a society — whether you are right, whether you are left, whether you are 'pro-life' or not — it doesn't matter. You will all suffer the consequences of a crowded, broken political, healthcare, and education system."View Entire Post ›

Here's what experts say about getting the two vaccines at once.