Edgewood secures $20m in Series A for clinical development of cancer therapy

The US company is developing its BTX-A51 therapy as a treatment for acute myeloid leukaemia and solid tumours.

Phalguni Deswal March 26 2024

Massachusetts-based company Edgewood Oncology has raised $20m in Series A to advance the clinical development of its lead cancer therapy BTX-A51.

The Series A funding round was led by US-based venture fund Alta Partners. Edgewood Oncology expects the funds to finance multiple clinical trials into 2026.

BTX-A51 is a multi-kinase inhibitor of casein kinase 1 alpha (CK1α) and cyclin-dependent kinases 7 and 9 (CDK7 and CDK9). Edgewood acquired the rights to the therapy from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 2023.

Edgewood is evaluating BTX-A51 in an open-label Phase I/II trial (NCT04243785) as a monotherapy and in combination with a chemotherapeutic, azacitidine, in patients with relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukaemia (r/r AML). In Phase Ia, the BTX-A51 monotherapy showed a favourable safety profile along with encouraging antileukemic activity.

The combination cohort started enrolment in December 2023. The cohort is expected to enrol up to 30 participants. The cohort aims to evaluate the response rate, safety, toxicity, and pharmacokinetics of the combination therapy of BTX-A51 and azacytidine in patients with r/r AML.

The global market for AML therapies is expected to be worth $6.62bn in 2031, according to a GlobalData report. The AML therapy pipeline consists of more than 200 drugs in early development, with the majority of drugs in development being enzyme inhibitors, according to GlobalData Pharma Intelligence Center.

GlobalData is the parent company of Clinical Trials Arena.

Edgewood is also investigating BTX-A51 as a treatment for solid tumours and non-Hodgkin lymphoma, open-label Phase I trial (NCT04872166). The study expects to enrol up to 116 participants and is estimated to be completed in May 2027. The company also plans to initiate a Phase II trial evaluating BTX-A51 in breast cancer patients with a genetically defined profile in Q2 2024.

Advances in AML therapies include Daiichi Sankyo’s Vanflyta (quizartinib). In November 2023, the European Commission (EC) approved Vanflyta as an add-on therapy for newly diagnosed fms-like tyrosine kinase 3 internal tandem duplication (FLT3-ITD) positive AML in adults.

In September 2023, Mendus’s cancer vaccine, vividencel, received fast-track designation from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). A month later, Sellas Life Sciences Group’s CDK9 inhibitor, SLS009, received an orphan drug designation from the FDA.

AML therapies in early development include Aptose Biosciences’ tuspetinib. The company started the Phase I/II APTIVATE trial evaluating the drug’s pharmacodynamics, tolerability, safety, and pharmacokinetics in r/r AML patients in January.

In September 2023, Foghorn Therapeutics dosed the first patient in the Phase I trial evaluating the combination therapy of FHD-286 and chemotherapy in patients with r/r AML.

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