Press Release

CatalYm commences Dosing in a Phase 2 Study with Visugromab in Combination with Neoadjuvant Immunotherapy in Treatment-naive Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer Patients

MUNICH–(BUSINESS WIRE)–CatalYm today announced that the first patient has been dosed in the Phase 2 clinical trial, GDFather-NEO (NCT06059547), evaluating its lead anti-GDF-15 antibody candidate, visugromab, in combination with neoadjuvant immunotherapy (nivolumab, aPD-1 inhibitor) in muscle invasive bladder cancer (MIBC). The exploratory study expands visugromabโ€™s clinical Phase 2 evaluation to a therapeutic front-line setting, building on the positive results from the ongoing GDFather-2 (NCT04725474) trial in last-line metastatic patients with a range of advanced, treatment-resistant solid tumors.


โ€œVisugromab offers a very distinct mechanism of action that has the potential to break key immunotherapy resistance mechanisms preventing aPD-1 therapy to fully deliver,โ€ commented Prof. Dr. Andrea Necchi, Director of Genitourinary Medical Oncology at IRCCS San Raffaele Hospital and Principal Investigator of the study. โ€œBased on the encouraging efficacy signs achieved with the visugromab-nivolumab combination in the last-line setting, we are looking forward to exploring this new approach in the front-line setting to open new avenues for the treatment of early-stage bladder cancer.โ€

โ€œThis study provides us with the first opportunity to evaluate visugromab in an earlier clinical setting and allows us to gain a deeper understanding of its immunosupportive activity. It will also offer us expanded reference data on response-predictive biomarkers and provide further insights into visugromabโ€™s extensive therapeutic potential for patients with hard-to-treat cancers that have built immune-resistance mechanisms,โ€ added Dr. Phil Lโ€™Huillier, Chief Executive Officer at CatalYm.

The exploratory, controlled GDFATHER-NEO Phase 2 study is assessing the safety and initial signs of clinical efficacy of a combination treatment of nivolumab plus visugromab compared to nivolumab plus placebo in patients with MIBC who are set to undergo radical cystectomy and cannot or refuse to receive cisplatin-based chemotherapy. In addition, the study will provide data on potential response-predictive biomarkers for patient stratification. The trial will be led from Milan, Italy, and will enroll 30 patients in a 1:1 setting at four sites in Italy.

About the GDFATHER-2 Trials

The GDFATHER-2 trials (GDF-15 Antibody-mediaTed Human Effector cell Relocation Phase 2) (NCT04725474) are ongoing first-in-human Phase 2a cohorts investigating the effect of visugromab (CTL-002) as monotherapy and/or in combination with a PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor in patients with various advanced-stage, relapse/refractory solid tumors and the new biomarker-selected cohort. The study consists of two segments with a total of up to seven cohorts, enrolling up to 164 patients in Simon-2-stage designs to confirm a certain response rate within each tumor type. Five cohorts are within tumor types with anti-PD1/-L1 label, recruiting patients that either were refractory to or relapsed post prior anti-PD1/-L1 treatment. One cohort entails treatment of an anti-PD1/-L1 naรฏve tumor type in an indication without anti-PD1/-L1 approval and one tumor-agnostic cohort evaluates patient-selection based on two novel predictive biomarkers. In addition the company is also evaluating visugromab in an exploratory Phase 2 study GDFather-NEO (NCT06059547) in combination with neoadjuvant immunotherapy in first-line muscle invasive bladder cancer.

About Visugromab (CTL-002)

Visugromab is a monoclonal antibody that neutralizes the tumor-derived Growth Differentiation Factor-15 (GDF-15), a locally acting immunosuppressant fostering immunotherapy resistance. Neutralizing GDF-15 with visugromab reverses key cancer resistance mechanisms to reinstate an efficient anti-tumor response by reenabling immune cell activation and tumor infiltration. Visugromab has already demonstrated a good safety profile and potent and durable anti-tumor efficacy in combination with anti-PD-1 treatment in advanced cancer patients. The antibody is currently being investigated in ongoing Phase 2 studies in multiple solid tumor indications.

About CatalYm

CatalYm has identified GDF-15 as a key cancer therapy resistance mechanism and is developing a safe and efficacious immune therapy for solid tumors. GDF-15, an immunosuppressant important for feto-maternal tolerance, is hijacked by cancer cells to evade immune system attack. Visugromab, CatalYmโ€™s lead antibody, has demonstrated durable anti-tumor efficacy with long-lasting objective responses in relapsed and refractory metastatic solid tumor patients in combination with anti-PD-1. CatalYm is now advancing to Phase 2b studies to confirm visugromab as a new class of cancer immunotherapy in a broad range of anti-cancer regimens.

Contacts

CatalYm GmbH

Dr. Phil Lโ€™Huilier, CEO

[email protected]

Media Inquiries
Trophic Communications

Dr. Stephanie May

Phone: +49 171 185 56 82

[email protected]

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