Aprea Therapeutics Presents Preliminary Findings on Oral WEE1 Inhibitor APR-1051 at EORTC-NCI-AACR International Conference on Molecular Targets and Therapeutics

Aprea Therapeutics
Aprea Therapeutics

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Phase 1 ACESOT-1051 clinical trial is evaluating APR-1051 as monotherapy treatment in patients with significant unmet medical need; active enrollment is ongoing at three sites in the U.S.

Preliminary results to date demonstrate APR-1051 is safe and well-tolerated with no hematologic toxicity

DOYLESTOWN, Pa., Oct. 23, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Aprea Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: APRE) (“Aprea”, or the “Company”), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on precision oncology through synthetic lethality, today announced that preliminary safety results on its WEE1 inhibitor APR-1051 are highlighted in a poster being presented today at the EORTC-NCI-AACR Symposium on Molecular Targets and Cancer Therapeutics, taking place in Barcelona, Spain.

The results are from ACESOT-1051, a first-in-human Phase 1 study assessing the safety, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and preliminary efficacy of single-agent APR-1051 in advanced solid tumors harboring cancer-associated gene alterations.

The dose escalation part of the study (Part 1) is currently ongoing and is expected to include up to 39 patients with advanced solid tumors. Oral APR-1051 is being administered once daily for 28-day cycles. A total of 8 cohorts are planned, evaluating doses of 10 mg to 150 mg once daily. So far, patients have been enrolled in single patient Cohorts 1, 2 and 3, evaluating subtherapeutic doses of 10 mg, 20 mg and 30 mg, respectively.

Preliminary results

Data are available on two of three patients, with a cutoff date of October 7, 2024

  • Preliminary results demonstrate that APR-1051 is safe and well-tolerated with no hematologic toxicity

  • Hemoglobin, hematocrit, and platelet counts were stable or increased slightly during the first treatment cycle

  • There were no signs of neutropenia, with white blood cells and neutrophils trending up for both patients during the first treatment cycle

  • All adverse events (AEs) recorded were Grade 1 and 2, with one Grade 1 AE (abdominal distention) possibly related to APR-1051

  • No QT prolongation has been observed

  • Three patients have been dosed to date with data available on two of these. One had disease progression at 49 days, a second withdrew following 36 days of treatment and dosing is ongoing in the third patient.

“These preliminary data from our ongoing Phase 1 study are encouraging, showing that APR-1051 is safe and well-tolerated,” said Philippe Pultar, MD, Senior Medical Advisor and Lead of WEE1 Clinical Development at Aprea. “APR-1051 has been designed to be selective for WEE1, without the off-target inhibition of PLK or QT prolongation reported for other molecules in this class. We expect to confirm this favorable safety profile as we move to higher doses in the ACESOT-1051 trial. We are excited to explore the full therapeutic benefits of APR-1051, which has best in class potential, and hope to generate preliminary efficacy data from the study during 2025.”