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A Phase 2a Study of the LSD1 Inhibitor Img-7289 (bomedemstat) for the Treatment of Myelofibrosis.

Authors :
Pettit K.
Gerds A.T.
Yacoub A.
Watts J.M.
Tartaczuch M.
Bradley T.J.
Shortt J.
Stevenson W.S.
Curtin N.J.
Rossetti J.M.
Burbury K.
Natsoulis G.
Jones A.
Talpaz M.
Peppe J.
Ross D.M.
Rienhoff H.Y.
Pettit K.
Gerds A.T.
Yacoub A.
Watts J.M.
Tartaczuch M.
Bradley T.J.
Shortt J.
Stevenson W.S.
Curtin N.J.
Rossetti J.M.
Burbury K.
Natsoulis G.
Jones A.
Talpaz M.
Peppe J.
Ross D.M.
Rienhoff H.Y.

Abstract

Ruxolitinib (Jakafi) is the one approved therapy for myelofibrosis (MF) based on reduction of splenomegaly and symptoms but JAK inhibition has not proven to significantly modify disease progression. There remains the need for novel therapies with distinct modes of action that can improve the patient experience of MF and impact progression. Lysine-specific demethylase, LSD1, is an epigenetic enzyme critical for self-renewal of malignant myeloid cells and differentiation of myeloid progenitors. LSD1 bound to GFI1b permits maturation of progenitors to megakaryocytes and enables their normal function. IMG-7289 (bomedemstat) is an orally available LSD1 inhibitor. In mouse models of myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN), IMG-7289 reduced elevated peripheral cell counts, spleen size, inflammatory cytokines, mutant allele frequencies, and marrow fibrosis (Jutzi et al. 2018) supporting its clinical development. IMG-7289-CTP-102 is an ongoing, multi-center, open-label study that recently transitioned from a Phase 1/2a dose-range finding study to a Phase 2b study of IMG-7289 administered orally once-daily in adult patients with intermediate-2 or high-risk MF resistant to or intolerant of ruxolitinib. The key objectives are safety, PD, changes in spleen volume (MRI/CT) and total symptoms scores (TSS) using the MPN-SAF instrument. Inclusion criteria included a platelet count >=100K/muL. Bone marrow (BM) biopsies and imaging studies (both centrally-read) were conducted at baseline and during washout (post-Day 84). The MPN-SAF was self-administered weekly. Phase 1/2a patients were treated for 84 days followed by a washout of up to 28 days. Patients demonstrating clinical benefit could resume treatment for additional 12 week cycles. Dosing was individually tailored using platelet count as a biomarker of effective thrombopoiesis. Patients were started at a presumed sub-therapeutic dose of 0.25 mg/kg/d and up-titrated weekly until the platelet count rested between 50 and 100K/muL. This

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1305108053
Document Type :
Electronic Resource