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Endocrine Abstracts (2024) 108 C5 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.108.C5

NANETS2024 17th Annual Multidisciplinary NET Medical Symposium NANETS 2024 Clinical - Chemo/SSA/Biologics (19 abstracts)

Once-daily oral paltusotine in the treatment of patients with carcinoid syndrome: results from a phase 2, randomized, parallel-group study

Aman Chauhan, MD1, Amr Mohamed, MD2, Keith Usiskin, MD3, Cosina Mui, BSc3, Joseph Dillon, MD4, Dongli Zhou, PhD3, Tiffany P. Quock, PhD3, Zaineb Sharafali, MPH3, Shagufta Shaheen, MD5, Juan Manuel O’Connor, MD, MSc6, Simron Singh, MD, MPH7 & Alan Krasner MD1


1Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Miami Health System, Miami, FL; 2University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH; 3Crinetics Pharmaceuticals, San Diego, CA; 4University of Iowa, Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA; 5Stanford Medicine, Stanford, CA; 6Insitutuo Alexander Fleming, Buenos Aires, Argentina; 7Sunnybrook Health Sciences Center, Toronto, Canada


Background: Paltusotine is a once-daily, oral, nonpeptide, selective SST2 receptor agonist in development for the treatment of acromegaly and carcinoid syndrome (CS).

Methods: This open-label, multicenter, dose-ranging study examined the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and exploratory efficacy of paltusotine in patients with CS. Eligible patients had documented, well-differentiated, grade I or II NETs (eg, GEP-NETs, bronchial NETs) with CS. Patients who were somatostatin receptor ligand (SRL) treatment naïve or currently untreated and actively symptomatic (average of ≥4 bowel movement [BMs] per day or >2 flushing episodes per day in ≥2 days over 2-week period) and patients with symptom control on SRLs who demonstrated symptom worsening after SRL washout were randomly assigned to receive once-daily oral paltusotine 40 mg or 80 mg for 8 weeks. Exploratory efficacy was assessed using a daily symptom diary. Meaningful within-patient change (MPWC) thresholds were derived using FDA-recommended methods: for daily BM frequency -0.90 to -1.10 (single threshold: -0.90) and for daily flushing frequency -1.70 to -1.85 (single threshold: -1.80).

Results: Thirty-six patients (n = 9 treatment naïve or currently untreated; n = 27 SRL washout) were enrolled. Entry criteria were met by 22 patients for flushing and 25 patients for BM. Among Week 8 completers (n = 30), mean reduction from baseline in daily BM frequency was -1.1, and in daily flushing frequency it was -1.7. In patients with >3 BMs per day at baseline, mean excess daily BM frequency decreased from 2.0 to 0.8 (-60%). In patients with >1 flushing episode per day at baseline, mean daily flushing frequency decreased from 3.2 to 1.2 (-63%). Mean daily frequency of urgent BM episodes decreased from 1.1 to 0.4 (-64%); mean abdominal pain severity (worst pain score, scale from 0-10) decreased from 2.5 to 1.2 (-52%); and mean flushing severity (worst flushing score, scale from 0-10) decreased from 3.7 to 1.5 (-59%). During treatment, paltusotine dose was increased (per protocol) in 9 patients. Among patients meeting entry criteria for the corresponding symptom, 40% (10/25) met the daily BM frequency MWPC threshold of -0.90 and 59% (13/22) the daily flushing frequency MWPC threshold of -1.80. No severe or serious adverse events (AEs) were considered treatment related. Two patients discontinued the study due to AEs (encephalopathy and bowel obstruction; not drug related). No new safety signals were identified.

Conclusions: In this phase 2 study, treatment with once-daily, oral paltusotine reduced the frequency and severity of CS symptoms and was well tolerated, justifying further clinical development.

ABSTRACT ID28555

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