RE:RE:RE:RE:Preliminary Results from BCG-Unresponsive NMIBC Treatment Yep...6 of 8 evaluable patients (75%) at 12 months, 8 of 10 (80%) at 9 months, 13 of 15 (87%) at 6 months & 20 of 22 (91%) at 3 months.
Eoganacht wrote: Hi CancerSlayer, I just reread Dr. Li's comments and I think you're right. I think 8 of the 22 patients have reached 12 months and 6 of those 8 are CR which is 75%
CancerSlayer wrote: CancerSlayer wrote:
Eoganacht wrote: Preliminary results for a phase 2 trial of CG0070 used in conjunction with Keytruda were announced today at the AUA meeting. In the first 22 patients 8 achieved a CR at 12 months (36%) and 6 achieved a durable response (27%). As a standalone treatment in previous phase 1 and 2 trials CG0070 achieved a 12 month CR rate of just under 30%. Results seem to be very close to those of the combined use of BCG and N-803 announced on Friday.
Results of CG0070 Combined With Pembrolizumab in BCG-Unresponsive NMIBC
Per CG Oncology:
Summary of Interim Clinical Results
- As of the interim analysis, based on a data cutoff on April 28, 2022, 22 patients were evaluable for efficacy with a minimum of 3 months follow up.
- 91% of patients evaluable for efficacy (n=20/22) have achieved complete response (CR) at the initial 3-month timepoint. Of those patients evaluable for CR at additional timepoints, 87% (n=15) have also maintained a CR through 6 months, 80% (n=10) through 9 months and 75% (n=8) at the 12-month assessment.
I interpret the data differently. 75% of "evaluable" patients at 12 months (n=8) achieved a CR. I don't believe all 22 patients have reached the 12 month mark/assessment as of the date of this release.
CG0070 used as a stand-alone single agent (monotherapy) achieved a 27% CR at 12 months for CIS +/- Ta/T1 disease.
The above data certainly indicates that adding a 2nd agent to a checkpoint inhibitor (CG0070 + Keytruda) will give a much more robust response. However, there remains a big downside = too many instillations/treatments with the increased potential for poor compliance & increased side effects...not to mention cost.