On July 9, 2025 Immuneering (Nasdaq: IMRX), a clinical-stage oncology company outpacing cancer to help patients outlive their disease, reported that the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) granted the company a composition of matter patent for atebimetinib (IMM-1-104), an oral once-daily deep cyclic inhibitor of MEK (Press release, Immuneering, JUL 9, 2025, View Source [SID1234654306]). MEK is a key component of the signaling pathway that drives the majority of cancers, including pancreatic cancer.
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First-line pancreatic cancer patients treated with atebimetinib plus chemotherapy had a remarkable 94% probability of surviving 6 months, in data from Immuneering’s ongoing Phase 2a study announced in June, with few serious side effects observed. In prior studies of the most common global standard of care chemotherapy in first-line pancreatic cancer patients, the probability of surviving 6 months was only 67%.
U.S. Patent No. 12,351,566, titled: "MEK Inhibitors and Therapeutic Uses Thereof", includes claims to atebimetinib’s composition of matter. The patent’s term, which includes a patent term adjustment, is currently expected to expire in August 2042. The patent may also be eligible for patent term extension to recover a portion of the time required to fulfill regulatory approval requirements.
"Our priorities are to make medicines that keep working, so cancer patients keep living, and to make medicines that have fewer side effects, so cancer patients can feel like themselves and live normal lives. We have already observed exceptional durability and a markedly favorable tolerability profile in first-line pancreatic cancer patients treated with atebimetinib+mGnP, and this is just the beginning of the important impact that we believe atebimetinib and our entire pipeline of deep cyclic inhibitors will have on the treatment of cancer," said Ben Zeskind, Ph.D., Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of Immuneering.
"We believe the granting of our composition of matter patent validates the novelty of our approach and secures key intellectual property around our lead product candidate, as part of a broader intellectual property strategy," Zeskind continued. "We expect that the long patent runway we are forging for atebimetinib will support our efforts to maximize its full therapeutic potential, starting with first-line pancreatic cancer and extending to many different cancer types and combinations."
Atebimetinib previously received FDA Fast Track designations for the treatment of first- and second-line pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), as well as for patients with unresectable or metastatic NRAS-mutant melanoma who have progressed on or are intolerant to PD-1/PD-L1 based immune checkpoint inhibitors. The FDA also previously granted atebimetinib orphan drug designation for the treatment of pancreatic cancer. Immuneering has also announced plans to study atebimetinib in combination with other therapeutics – in a variety of additional cancers.