Phase II year
2021
(last award dollars: 2022)
Phase II Amount
$2,033,915
Pancreatic cancer is a devastating disease with a very low (8%) 5-year survival rate. Therapeutic options arelimited in efficacy and many have substantial toxicity. Targeted drug delivery may improve the therapeuticindex of cancer drugs by enhancing drug localization to the cancer cell while minimizing off-target side effects.Sigma-2 receptors (S2R) are highly expressed in pancreatic and other cancers compared to healthy cells.Accuronix Therapeutics is developing ACXT-3102, a molecule with therapeutic potential licensed fromWashington University School of Medicine in St. Louis (WUSM). ACXT-3102 is comprised of a S2 ligandcovalently bound to the ferroptosis-inducing molecule dm-erastin. Preliminary data show that ACXT-3102increased the cytotoxicity against pancreatic tumor cells in vitro by 35-fold compared to dm-erastin alone.ACXT-3102 has tremendous potential as a novel treatment option for pancreatic and perhaps several othertypes of cancer. Drug optimization strategies were conducted in a Phase I STTR which resulted in a betteryield during drug synthesis, identification of a mesylate salt with high aqueous solubility and improved physicalproperties suitable for oral drug administration, demonstration of good oral efficacy and discovery that tumorslacking malic enzyme 1 (ME1) are even more sensitive to ACXT-3102.For this Phase II STTR program, Accuronix Therapeutics will continue to work with our research colleaguesfrom WUSM to prepare ACXT-3102 for Investigational New Drug (IND) submission and eventually testing thecompound in pancreatic cancer patients. We will conduct a series of preclinical studies to optimize the dosingregimen in murine pancreatic cancer models - understanding if once, twice or three times per day drugadministration improves plasma exposure and anti-tumor efficacy while maintaining safety, i.e., avoiding dose-limiting side effects. Studies will also explore if efficacy of our drug can be further improved when given incombination with gemcitabine, a current standard-of-care for pancreatic cancer. Chemical and metabolicstability of ACXT-3102 will be established using in vitro assays to guide storage conditions of the drug andunderstand which preclinical species best represents metabolism in humans. To obtain data required for thepharmacology and safety sections of the IND package, preclinical studies will be conducted according to GoodLaboratory Practice (GLP) guidelines to generate pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) data forcorrelating plasma exposures in different species to what is predicted in human. Similarly, formal GLPtoxicology studies will be completed using three different doses in rats and dogs to establish the "No ObservedAdverse Effect Level" (NOAEL). These data will be used to model exposure levels in humans and establish asafe, first-in-human (FIH) dose for starting our clinical trials in cancer patients. At the conclusion of the PhaseII STTR grant, we will have the pharmacology and safety information on ACXT-3102 required for the INDpackage, and will have established the first dose to be used in patients.
Public Health Relevance Statement: Project Narrative The primary goal of this Phase II STTR application is to develop ACXT-3102 as an improved therapeutic for the treatment of pancreatic adenocarcinoma. Selectively targeted cancer drugs hold great promise to increase therapeutic efficacy while minimizing putative off-site toxicities, i.e. improving tolerability. Successful conclusion of this program will be judged by having 1) established the optimal doses and dosing schedule required for good efficacy in cancer models, 2) determined how to store the drug without losing activity, 3) generated critical pharmacology and safety data required by the FDA to submit for starting clinical trials, and 4) predicted a safe initial dose to start treating cancer patients in the first clinical trial with ACXT-3102.
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