- Treatment well tolerated with a safety profile consistent with standard-of-care (SoC)
- Increased biochemical response rates (IGF-1≤1xULN) vs SoC at baseline
- Continuous improvement of acromegaly symptom and quality of life scores vs baseline
- Study results reinforce previously reported interim results from ACROINNOVA 21
“Today’s results from ACROINNOVA 2 highlight the long-term safety profile and efficacy of octreotide SC depot in patients with acromegaly, including patients with uncontrolled disease on standard-of-care”, says
The primary endpoint was safety over 52 weeks of study treatment. Octreotide SC depot was well tolerated with a long-term safety profile consistent with that of SoC with first generation somatostatin receptor ligands (SRL), extended-release octreotide and lanreotide, with no new safety signals. The most common adverse events (AEs) were mild to moderate injection site reactions and gastrointestinal events. There were no cases of severe AEs related to octreotide SC depot. One patient had a treatment-related serious adverse event of cholelithiasis (moderate), which resolved, and the patient continued treatment in the trial. Two patients (1.5%) discontinued treatment due to AEs; one case of mild depression and once case of mild injection site hemorrhage.
ACROINNOVA 2 included multiple secondary endpoints, including biochemical control rates, symptom scores, and several patient-reported outcomes. Treatment with octreotide SC depot over 52 weeks resulted in significant increases in treatment response rates of 12.7% (95%CI: 5.5%, 19.9%) in the overall population, and 22.8% (95%CI: 11.6, 33.9) in new patients compared SoC at baseline. Roll-over patients, with controlled IGF-1 values at the SoC baseline, maintained or regained (for placebo) biochemical control during treatment with octreotide SC depot. Treatment with octreotide SC depot also resulted in continuous improvement of acromegaly symptom scores and patient reported outcomes, including treatment satisfaction, acromegaly quality of life, and self-injection assessment scores compared to SoC at baseline.
“The results from ACROINNOVA 2 are very encouraging and demonstrated that CAM2029 octreotide SC depot was effective in normalizing IGF-1 levels across patient groups and continuously improving symptoms of acromegaly throughout the 52 weeks of treatment. Additionally, the convenience of a once-monthly SC dosing using the prefilled autoinjector pen contributed to improved treatment satisfaction and quality of life, which are important unmet needs for patients living with acromegaly”, says
For more information
Tel. +46 (0)46 286 46 92
fredrik.tiberg@camurus.com
Fredrik Joabsson, Chief Business Development Officer
Tel. +46 (0)70 776 17 37
ir@camurus.com
About acromegaly
Acromegaly is a rare, slowly progressive disease, typically caused by a tumor of the pituitary gland producing excess growth hormone and stimulating increased insulin growth factor-1 (IGF-1) levels. This results in abnormal growth of bone and tissue, enlarged hands, feet, facial features and inner organs, and symptoms such as fatigue, joint pain, headache, visual field defects, excessive sweating, and paresthesia.2 Inadequate biochemical and symptom control can have detrimental impacts on quality of life and mortality of patients with acromegaly.3-8 The prevalence of acromegaly is estimated to about 60 cases per million.9
About the ACROINNOVA clinical program
ACROINNOVA comprises two Phase 3 trials evaluating efficacy and safety of octreotide SC depot (CAM2029) in patients with acromegaly. The 24-week Phase 3, randomized, double-blind, multi-center, placebo-controlled study (ACROINNOVA 1, NCT04076462) included 72 adult patients who were biochemically controlled (IGF-1≤1xULN) on stable doses of standard-of-care (SoC) at screening and transferred to randomized 2:1 treatment to octreotide SC depot (CAM2029) or placebo. The second study is a 52-week Phase 3 long-term safety and extension trial of octreotide SC depot (ACROINNOVA 2, NCT04125836) in 135 patients with acromegaly on stable treatment with SoC at baseline; 81 new patients directly enrolled in the trial who were either biochemically controlled or uncontrolled at screening (IGF-1<2xULN), and 54 patients who had rolled over from ACROINNOVA 1 after 24 weeks of randomized treatment with CAM2029 or placebo (washed-out patients) and were biochemically controlled at screening (IGF-1≤1xULN). Interim results from ACROINNOVA 2 were announced on
About CAM2029
Octreotide SC depot, CAM2029, is an investigational, ready-to-use octreotide for subcutaneous administration under development for the treatment of acromegaly, as well as gastroentero-pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (GEP-NET), and polycystic liver disease (PLD). CAM2029 is designed for enhanced octreotide exposure and convenient, once-monthly administration with a prefilled autoinjector pen to facilitate easy self-administration by patients.
The CAM2029 clinical program for acromegaly comprises of seven clinical trials, including four Phase 1 studies, one Phase 2 study, and two Phase 3 studies within the ACROINNOVA clinical program. CAM2029 has demonstrated an approximate five-fold higher bioavailability compared to the currently approved, long-acting, intramuscular (IM) octreotide.10 In the Phase 3 ACROINNOVA program, CAM2029 showed superior biochemical control compared to placebo as well as improvements in symptom control, treatment satisfaction, and quality of life compared to SoC at baseline with first-generation somatostatin receptor ligands (SRLs), octreotide and lanreotide. The safety profile of CAM2029 was consistent with SoC with no new findings.
About
References
- Press release
17 July, 2023 : https://www.camurus.com/media/press-releases/2023/camurus-announces-new-phase-3-data-reinforcing-long-term-safety-and-efficacy-of-octreotide-sc-depot-cam2029-in-patients-with-acromegaly/ - Colao A., et al. Acromegaly. Nat Rev Dis Primers. 2019;5(1):20.
- Webb SM, et al. Quality of Life in Acromegaly. Neuroendocrinology. 2016;103(1):106-111.
- Strasburger CJ, et al. Patient-reported outcomes of parenteral somatostatin analogue injections in 195 patients with acromegaly. Eur J Endocrinol. 2016 Mar;174(3):355-62.
- Melmed S., et al. Causes and clinical manifestations of acromegaly, UpToDate, last updated
May 2020 , accessedMay 2023 . - Melmed S., et al. Diagnosis of acromegaly, UpToDate, last updated
Dec 2021 , accessedMay 2023 . - Katznelson L., et al. Acromegaly: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2014;99(11):3933-51.
- Holdaway IM, et al. Factors influencing mortality in acromegaly. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2004;89(2):667-74
- Crisafulli S., et al. Global epidemiology of acromegaly: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Eur J Endocrinology. 2021; 185:251-63.
- Prescribing Information SANDOSTATIN® LAR, https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2024/021008Orig1s047Corrected_lbl.pdf
This information is information that
https://news.cision.com/camurus-ab/r/camurus-announces-positive-phase-3-results-from-the-acroinnova-2-study-of-octreotide-sc-depot–cam20,c4014809
https://mb.cision.com/Main/13456/4014809/2915419.pdf
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