14 January 2025 | Tuesday | News
Picture Courtesy | Public Domain
GSK plc (LSE/NYSE: GSK) and IDRx, Inc. (IDRx) announced that they have entered into an agreement under which GSK will acquire IDRx, a Boston-based, clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company dedicated to developing precision therapeutics for the treatment of GIST. Under the agreement, GSK will pay $1 billion upfront, with potential for an additional $150 million success-based regulatory approval milestone payment. The acquisition includes lead molecule, IDRX-42, a highly selective KIT TKI being developed as a first- and second-line therapy for the treatment of GIST.
GIST typically presents in the GI tract with 80% of cases driven by mutations in the KIT gene that lead to the growth, proliferation, and survival of tumour cells (primary or activating mutations).1 90% of patients treated in the first-line develop new KIT mutations (secondary or resistance mutations) that typically lead to relapse with limited therapeutic options.2 Currently, there are no approved TKIs that inhibit the full spectrum of clinically relevant primary and secondary mutations in KIT.
IDRX-42 has demonstrated activity against all key primary and secondary KIT mutations, designed to improve outcomes for patients with GIST. This breadth of mutational coverage, in addition to high selectivity which could improve tolerability, provides potential for a best-in-class profile.
Updated clinical data from StrateGIST 1, an ongoing phase I/Ib trial of IDRX-42 in patients with advanced GIST, were presented in an oral presentation at the Connective Tissue Oncology Society (CTOS) 2024 Annual Meeting. These data show promising anti-tumour activity of IDRX-42 in patients with advanced GIST with a manageable safety profile. Across patients with second-line or greater GIST, and amongst all KIT mutation subsets, the objective response rate (ORR) by modified RECIST v1.1 in the total efficacy evaluable population was 29% (n=87), including one complete response (CR) and 24 partial responses (PRs). Amongst patients who have had one prior line of therapy, the ORR was 53% (n=15) including one CR and 7 PRs.3
Across all patients, two of the PRs were awaiting confirmation at the time of the data cut, both of which were subsequently confirmed. The emerging durability data from StrateGIST 1 was also favourable. IDRX-42 was generally well-tolerated and treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs) were mainly low grade at the recommended phase Ib dose.4
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