New Preclinical Results on Onxeo’s AsiDNA™, First-in-Class DNA Repair Inhibitor, Point to Strong Synergy and Reversion of Tumor Resistance when combined to PARP inhibitors

On July 12, 2018 Onxeo S.A. (Euronext Paris, NASDAQ Copenhagen: ONXEO), ("Onxeo" or "the Company"), a clinical-stage biotechnology company specializing in the development of innovative drugs in oncology, in particular against rare or resistant cancers, reported new positive results from preclinical studies of AsiDNA, its first-in-class DNA Repair inhibitor, in combination with PARP inhibitors (PARPi) (Press release, Onxeo, JUL 12, 2018, View Source [SID1234527668]). The results of these extensive studies with different PARPi point to the ability of AsiDNA to prevent the occurrence of resistance and even to reverse the acquired resistance of the tumor cell after PARPi treatments. Furthermore, they show that the combination has a strong synergistic anti-tumor activity in in vitro and in vivo models of solid tumors resistant to PARPi (HR proficient). Together with the preliminary data on the activity and safety of AsiDNA expected in Q4 2018 from the DRIIV-1 clinical trial, these results support clinical development of AsiDNA in combination with PARP inhibitors, which should start from year-end 2018.

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Judith Greciet, Chief Executive Officer of Onxeo, said: "Onxeo is conducting an ambitious development program for AsiDNA, notably translational, in combination with various anti-cancer agents in order to provide strategic information aimed at determining the indications and combinations to target in further clinical development as soon as the first results from DRIIV-1 are available. Assessing the combination of AsiDNA with PARPi is a priority, as their mechanisms of action are very complementary in indications with high unmet medical needs. Sales for the PARPi class are already substantial in ovarian cancer and are expected to increase markedly in the near-term as products gain access to multiple additional oncology indications. Our recent studies indicate that AsiDNA in combination with PARPi could enable PARPi to overcome the requirement of a genetic mutation such as BRCA-, and show a strong synergistic activity versus PARPi alone. Moreover, the combination appears to both prevent the occurrence of resistance to PARPi and reverse the acquired resistance, which may considerably expand treatment duration with PARPi. A treatment combining AsiDNA and PARPi could therefore significantly broaden the patient population eligible to PARPi and improve their efficacy, which is of great interest to the scientific community, the pharmaceutical industry and the patients for its potential to address resistant cancers."

AsiDNA is a first-in-class DNA repair inhibitor in the field of DNA Damage Response (DDR) that mimics double-stranded DNA breaks in tumor cells, activating repair pathways, diverting repair enzymes from the target and finally depleting the cell through a unique mechanism of agonist and decoy.

Data show that in in vitro models of HR proficient TNBC (triple negative breast cancer) and SCLC (small cell lung cancer), AsiDNA maintains PARP1 expression, the repair enzyme inhibited by PARP inhibitors, and abrogates the occurrence of resistance to PARPi, including in models of cancers resistant to PARPi. Down regulation of the PARP1 enzyme is one of the mechanisms that supports the occurrence of resistance to PARPi inhibitors1. As AsiDNA hyper-activates repair enzymes, an up regulation of PARP1 expression following treatment with AsiDNA or with AsiDNA associated to PARPi support the use of AsiDNA to maintain the sensitivity to PARPi treatment.

Furthermore, combination treatment of olaparib with AsiDNA more than doubles the complete response rate observed with olaparib alone (71% vs. 33%) in an in vivo model of HR proficient TNBC model and inhibits tumor growth in a humanized Patient-Derived Xenograft (PDX) mice model of ovarian cancer resistant to olaparib. PDX models are considered highly predictive of clinical behavior2.

The Company will submit the detailed results of these preclinical studies to leading peer-reviewed publications and international scientific conferences.

Francoise Bono, Chief Scientific Officer of Onxeo, concluded: "These most recent data validate our disruptive approach to DNA-targeting and confirm the broad opportunities for our lead molecule thanks to its unique mechanism of action. Our team has built an extremely solid body of preclinical evidence, both in-vitro and in highly predictive humanized in-vivo models, which shows the potential of AsiDNA to reverse the resistance to PARP inhibitors and the strong synergy of their combination. This is the first part of our extensive translational plan which aims at confirming the full potential of AsiDNA in combination with other anticancer agents such as chemotherapies or epigenetic compounds, including belinostat. Additional data on these other possible combinations will be available after the summer to further inform the clinical development of AsiDNA in combinations offering the potential for significant therapeutic improvement."