CatalYm Presents Long-Term Phase 1/2a Data Confirming Sustained Responses with Visugromab in CPI-Refractory Tumors at ESMO 2025

On October 20, 2025 CatalYm, a world leader in neutralizing GDF-15 in cancer and cachexia, reported updated long-term data from its ongoing GDFATHER-1/2a trial (NCT04725474) at the European Society of Medical Oncology (ESMO) (Free ESMO Whitepaper) Congress 2025. The data provide further evidence that Growth Differentiation Factor-15 (GDF-15) blockade by visugromab can reverse resistance to PD-(L)1 treatment in patients with advanced solid tumors and deliver durable responses in patients who have relapsed or progressed on prior checkpoint inhibitor treatment.

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Visugromab is a humanized monoclonal antibody designed to neutralize the tumor-derived cytokine GDF-15, which plays a key role in immune suppression and resistance to therapy. The updated dataset highlights visugromab’s potential to reinvigorate immune responses in difficult-to-treat tumor types and patient populations with limited treatment alternatives.

"The durability of responses we are seeing with visugromab in this heavily pretreated, late-stage population is particularly remarkable," said Prof. Dr. Ignacio Melero, Co-Director of Immunology and Immunotherapy at CIMA, Universidad de Navarra, and Principal Investigator of the trial. "To observe ongoing responses extending beyond two and sometimes even three years in patients who had progressed on prior checkpoint inhibition is both encouraging and remarkable in this setting. These data underscore the potential of GDF-15 blockade to establish immune sensitivity in resistant tumors."

Key trial results

Out of 199 patients enrolled, 77 patients with either non-squamous NSCLC (n=22), urothelial cancer (n=27) or hepatocellular carcinoma (n=28) received visugromab in combination with nivolumab, all with progression on prior anti-PD-(L)1 therapy.
Confirmed objective response rates (RECIST 1.1) were 18.2% (4/22) in non-squamous NSCLC, 18.5% (5/27) in urothelial cancer, and 14.3% (4/28) in hepatocellular carcinoma, including 5 complete responses and multiple deep partial responses across cohorts.
Median duration of response reached 32.2 months in non-squamous NSCLC, 28.8 months in urothelial cancer, and 19.4 months in hepatocellular carcinoma. At data cut-off, 53.8% (7 of 13) of responses were ongoing across all three cohorts.
In 76.9% (10/13) of responders, the duration of response on visugromab plus nivolumab exceeded that of their prior checkpoint inhibitor treatment; 61.5% of responders also achieved a deeper response than previously recorded.
The combination was well tolerated, with treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs) reported in 58.4% of patients. Most TRAEs were Grade 1 or 2 and manageable. Grade ≥3 TRAEs occurred in 13% of patients and included expected immune-related events.
In cachectic patients, treatment was associated with clinically meaningful weight gain, indicating potential quality-of-life benefit.
"Our long-term follow-up data suggest that GDF-15 blockade with visugromab may offer meaningful and sustained benefit to patients who progress or do not respond to immunotherapy," said Sujata Rao, MD, Chief Medical Officer at CatalYm. "The duration and depth of responses we continue to observe support further development of visugromab in earlier treatment lines, where maintaining immune sensitivity is critical."

"The growing body of clinical data for visugromab confirms our conviction that GDF-15 neutralization provides a novel strategy to overcome immune resistance and support immune reactivation," said Scott Clarke, Chief Executive Officer at CatalYm. "With several Phase 2b trials now underway, we are focused on translating this approach into improved outcomes across different patient populations and tumor types."

GDFATHER-1/2a (NCT04725474) is a multicenter, open-label Phase 1/2a trial evaluating visugromab in combination with an anti-PD-1 inhibitor in patients with advanced solid tumors. Phase 1 dose escalation comprised one cycle of monotherapy followed by combination treatment, while Phase 2a focused on expansion cohorts e.g. in non-squamous NSCLC, urothelial cancer, and hepatocellular carcinoma that had progressed on prior anti-PD-(L)1 therapy. Patients received visugromab at the recommended Phase 2 dose plus nivolumab every two weeks. Key endpoints included objective response rate, duration of response, and translational markers of immune activation.

(Press release, Catalym, OCT 20, 2025, View Source [SID1234656849])