Arcus Biosciences, Inc. announced promising overall survival data from ARC-8, a Phase 1b study that is being co-developed with Gilead Sciences. ARC-8 is the study of quemliclustat, an investigational small molecule CD73 inhibitor, plus chemotherapy with or without zimberelimab, an investigational anti-PD-1 antibody, in patients with previously untreated metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (mPDAC). The results will be presented during the 2024 American Society of Clinical Oncology Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium (ASCO GI).

The results to be presented include data from all patients (n=122) with treatment-naïve (first-line) mPDAC who received 100mg of quemliclustat plus chemotherapy with or without zimberelimab in the dose-escalation, dose-expansion and randomization cohorts of ARC-8. The data cutoff was June 19, 2023. Median overall survival (mOS) data for both quemliclustat-based regimens were numerically greater than historical benchmark data for chemotherapy alone, which has shown a mOS of approximately nine months. An analysis was performed by the Medidata AI team, part of Medidata, a Dassault Systèmes company, whereby they constructed a Synthetic Control Arm of patients who were treated with gemcitabine/nab-paclitaxel in Phase 2 and 3 clinical studies in the first-line metastatic pancreatic cancer setting, on a post-hoc basis.

Patients from these studies were matched 1:1 to the pool of 122 patients treated with the 100 mg quemliclustat-based regimens in ARC-8, based on demographics and key baseline characteristics such as ECOG performance status, liver metastasis, and history of prior surgery. The matched SCA was constructed based on a pre-specified analysis plan before OS data were unblinded and analyzed by the Medidata AI team. The analysis showed that the patients in ARC-8 lived longer than patients from the matched control arm.

Specifically, these results showed that patients in ARC-8 experienced a: 37% reduction in the risk of death, HR=0.63 (CI: 0.47 ? 0.85, p=0.0030) and a 5.9-month increase in mOS (15.7 vs 9.8 months) relative to the matched control arm. The efficacy data for the pooled dose-escalation, dose-expansion and randomized arms, as well as the data from the SCA, are summarized below: No new safety signals were observed in the study.

The most common adverse events (Grade 3 or higher) were neutropenia (37.9%, 34.4% and 38.7%) and anemia (27.6%, 26.2% and 23.7%), respectively, for cohorts A2, A1 and Pooled Q100 QZ+G/nP. Five deaths were reported, and none were considered by the study investigators to be related to quemliclustat or zimberelimab. Quemliclustat and zimberelimab are investigational molecules.

Arcus and Gilead have not received approval from any regulatory authority for any use globally, and their safety and efficacy for the treatment of pancreatic cancer have not been established. Quemliclustat is an investigational, potent and selective small molecule CD73 inhibitor. CD73 is the primary enzymatic producer of immunosuppressive adenosine in the tumor microenvironment, and high CD73 expression is associated with significantly poorer prognosis in several tumor types.

Quemliclustat has been shown to block the production of adenosine. Once the immunosuppressive effects of adenosine are removed, activation of antitumor immune cells may be restored, resulting in cancer cell death. Arcus and Gilead are currently evaluating quemliclustat in combination with other molecules within the collaboration portfolio with chemotherapy, including Phase 2 studies in lung and upper gastrointestinal cancers.

The ARC-8 trial is a Phase 1b, open-label, dose-escalation and dose-expansion platform study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic, pharmacodynamic and clinical activity of combinations of the small molecule CD73 inhibitor quemliclustat, anti-PD-1 antibody zimberelimab and chemotherapy (gemcitabine /nab-paclitaxel, or G/nP) in participants with advanced pancreatic cancer. After the dose-escalation phase, quemliclustat 100 mg was selected as the dose for expansion. Patients were treated with quemliclustat 100 mg every two weeks plus standard doses of chemotherapy and zimberelimab (240 mg IV every two weeks) in Cohort A (treatment-naïve mPDAC) of the dose-expansion phase and then randomized 2:1 to receive quemliclustat plus zimberelimab and chemotherapy (Cohort A1) or quemliclustat plus chemotherapy (Cohort A2).

Pooled analyses were conducted to reflect: 1) all treatment-naïve patients who received quemliclustat 100 mg plus zimberelimab and chemotherapy from dose-escalation and dose-expansion phases and 2) all treatment-naïve patients receiving 100 mg of quemliclustat with or without zimberelimab across dose-expansion and escalation phases. Endpoints included safety, overall response rate, median overall survival and progression-free survival. Additionally, an analysis comparing the All Pooled cohort to a Synthetic Control Arm (SCA) was conducted to address the differences in patient characteristics in the study cohorts, particularly in relation to decreased presence of liver metastases at baseline in cohort A2.

The SCA consisted of historical clinical trial data from patients treated with G/nP, with baseline characteristics matched to those of ARC-8 participants. Pancreatic cancer occurs in the pancreas, an organ located behind the stomach that helps with digestion and controlling blood sugar. Pancreatic cancer is one of the most aggressive cancers, with a dismal prognosis.

Approximately 50% of patients with PDAC are diagnosed in the metastatic setting, which is associated with a 5-year survival rate of only 3%. Over 80% of pancreatic cancers are diagnosed at a late stage. The majority (over 90%) of pancreatic cancers are adenocarcinomas, a type of cancer that forms in tissues that line certain internal organs and release fluids like those that help with digestion.

There have been limited advancements for treating pancreatic cancer, and chemotherapy has been the standard of care for more than 30 years.