Troy Wilson
Analyst · Cantor Fitzgerald
Thank you, Pete. And thank you all for joining us. This past quarter was highlighted by strong execution across the organization as we continue to generate a robust clinical data package to support broad development of our menin inhibitor program beginning with ziftomenib. In April, ziftomenib became the first investigational therapy to be granted Breakthrough Therapy Designation for treatment of relapsed/refractory NPM1-mutant acute myeloid leukemia. FDA awarded BTD based on data from our KOMET-001 trial, recognizing ziftomenib's potential as an innovative medicine for patients with this devastating disease. In May, we announced completion of enrollment in the registration-directed portion of KOMET-001, enrolling more than 85 NPM1-mutant AML patients in fewer than 16 months. We believe this important milestone reinforces ziftomenib's potential best-in-class profile. As a reminder, NPM1-mutant AML represents approximately 30% of new AML cases annually, and is a disease of significant unmet need for which there's no approved targeted therapy. With the KOMET-001 study now fully enrolled, we look forward to sharing topline data early next year as we continue to work closely with FDA to expedite development and review of ziftomenib as a monotherapy. Meanwhile, we continue to evaluate ziftomenib in combination with current standards of care in patients with both NPM1-mutant and KMT2A-rearranged AML. Earlier this year, we reported preliminary clinical data from 20 patients enrolled in the Phase 1 dose escalation portion of our KOMET-007 trial. Ziftomenib demonstrated an encouraging safety and tolerability profile, as well as meaningful evidence of clinical activity when administered in combination with cytarabine plus daunorubicin, commonly known as 7+3, as well as with venetoclax plus azacitidine. Notably, no differentiation syndrome events of any grade were reported. Furthermore, no dose-limiting toxicities, QTc prolongation, drug-drug interactions, or additive myelosuppression were observed. Continuous daily dosing of ziftomenib at 200 milligrams was well tolerated, and the safety and tolerability profile was consistent with features of underlying disease and backbone therapies. Since that update, our team has continued to demonstrate outstanding execution and the KOMET-007 study has now enrolled more than 100 patients. I'm pleased to report that the safety, tolerability and clinical activity of ziftomenib continue to support advancement into both the FIT and UNFIT frontline populations. Two of the four cohorts have cleared the 600 milligram dose and advanced into the Phase 1b expansion study. The two remaining cohorts are expected to clear the 600 milligram dose and advance shortly. The Phase 1b expansion study includes multiple combination cohorts, most notably ziftomenib plus Ven/Aza, in newly diagnosed NPM1-mutant or KMT2A-rearranged AML, as well as ziftomenib plus 7+3 in newly diagnosed NPM1-mutant or KMT2A-rearranged AML, removing the requirement for patients to have high risk disease. Each combination cohort is enrolling independently, and we expect to enroll approximately 20 patients per cohort. We believe the Phase 1b expansion study will continue to lay the groundwork for helping us to redefine the current standards of care for newly diagnosed patients with both NPM1-mutant and KMT2A-rearranged AML in both the FIT and the UNFIT populations. We look forward to presenting updated data from the KOMET-007 combination trial of ziftomenib at a medical meeting later this year. It should be a meaningful update. In addition to the progress our team has made with the KOMET-007 study, we continue to dose patients in our ongoing KOMET-008 study of ziftomenib in combination with additional standards of care, including the FLT3 inhibitor gilteritinib, as well as FLAG-IDA, and low-dose cytarabine. Roughly half of all patients with relapsed or refractory NPM1-mutant AML have co-occurring FLT3 mutations, and the prognosis for these patients is poor. Preclinical data for ziftomenib in combination with FLT3 inhibitors has shown strong synergistic effects compared to either single agent alone. When we look across the FIT, UNFIT and FLT3 mutant AML frontline populations, we believe a best-in-class safety and activity profile and optimal pharmaceutical properties could enable ziftomenib to become a cornerstone of therapy for patients with acute leukemias. Ultimately, our mission is to develop ziftomenib across the continuum of care for all patients with acute leukemias whose disease is driven by the menin pathway. Over the past couple of years, we've generated a growing body of preclinical data that supports opportunities for menin inhibitors beyond acute leukemias, including the potential for ziftomenib in certain solid tumors. Earlier today, we announced FDA clearance of our Investigational New Drug application for ziftomenib in combination with imatinib for treatment of advanced gastrointestinal stromal tumors. GIST is the most common form of sarcoma, characterized as KIT-dependent solid tumors. KIT inhibitors are associated with favorable outcomes for patients with GIST, and imatinib is the frontline standard of care in this patient population. For patients who progress on imatinib, subsequent treatment options consist of other KIT inhibitors. However, these options are limited by moderate efficacy and challenging tolerability. The Menin-MLL complex regulates KIT expression in GIST cells, and menin inhibitors display additive therapeutic activity in combination with imatinib in imatinib-sensitive GIST models. Our preclinical data suggests ziftomenib has potential to resensitize patients to imatinib and induce deep, durable responses. Building upon an initial report from the Armstrong Lab, we've generated a substantial amount of preclinical data that further support the opportunity for ziftomenib in GIST. We look forward to presenting these data for the ziftomenib-imatinib combination at an upcoming scientific meeting. And following the IND clearance announced this morning, we plan to initiate a proof-of-concept study evaluating ziftomenib in combination with imatinib in patients with advanced GIST after failure of imatinib early next year. If successful, the potential opportunity in GIST appears to be mutationally agnostic, enabled by ziftomenib's favorable pharmaceutical properties, with an addressable market as significant as our frontline opportunities in AML. In June, we reported preclinical data supporting the potential therapeutic utility of menin inhibitors in the treatment of diabetes. The new findings were presented at the American Diabetes Association Scientific Sessions in Orlando. Type 2 diabetes is marked by an inadequate number of functional pancreatic beta cells, which results in insufficient insulin production leading to hyperglycemia. Ziftomenib demonstrated meaningful levels of glycemic control in the preclinical in vivo model, including reduced fasting blood glucose levels and %HbA1C within 27 days, as well as consistent improvement in both insulin sensitivity and insulin production. The preclinical data showed that the effects of ziftomenib were fully maintained following dose discontinuations, suggesting restoration of beta cell mass. A decline in pancreatic beta cell function and/or mass has been defined as a key contributing factor to disease progression in Type 2 diabetes. Notably, in human islet microtissues originating from donor samples, ziftomenib induced beta cell proliferation while non-beta cell proliferation was not detectable, demonstrating menin is a viable therapeutic target for beta cell mass-specific expansion. We're advancing multiple next-generation menin inhibitor drug candidates targeting Type 2 diabetes and potentially, Type 1 diabetes, and we expect to nominate the first of these next-generation development candidates in early 2025. Now let's turn our attention briefly to our farnesyl transferase inhibitor programs. Despite success of targeted therapies, a considerable need remains to drive enhanced antitumor activity while addressing mechanisms of innate and adaptive resistance. We're developing our next-generation farnesyl transferase inhibitor, KO-2806, to address these needs. 2806 was designed to improve upon the potency, pharmacokinetic and physical chemical properties of earlier FTI drug candidates. Last year, we presented compelling preclinical data supporting the potential for KO-2806 to address mechanisms of innate and adaptive resistance in distinct classes of targeted therapies, including tyrosine kinase inhibitors and KRAS inhibitors. Late last year, we began dosing patients with KO-2806 as a monotherapy in a Phase 1 dose escalation trial that we call FIT-001. FIT-001 uses an innovative design that enabled us to begin dose escalation of 2806 in combination cohorts very early on in the study while continuing to dose escalate concurrently as a single agent. In February, we dosed the first patient with KO-2806 in combination with cabozantinib in clear cell renal cell carcinoma just four months after KO-2806 entered the clinic. And I'm pleased to report we recently dosed the first patient in its combination study with adagrasib in KRAS G12C-mutated non-small cell lung cancer. As a reminder, the study of KO-2806 and adagrasib is supported by a clinical collaboration and supply agreement with Mirati, now a Bristol Myers Squibb company. If successful, we believe KO-2806 could drive enhanced antitumor activity and become an ideal combination partner to multiple targeted therapies in large solid tumor indications. Meanwhile, we continue to evaluate the combination of tipifarnib with the targeted therapy alpelisib in PIK3CA-dependent head and neck squamous cell carcinoma in a Phase 1 dose escalation study that we call KURRENT-HN. We remain pleased by the manageable safety and tolerability profile of tipifarnib in combination with alpelisib, and we're encouraged by the clinical activity observed at multiple dose levels. We remain on track to complete enrollment of the two expansion cohorts to help inform selection of the optimal biologically active dose for the combination by the end of this year, and we look forward to presenting preliminary clinical data from the KURRENT-HN trial of tipifarnib and alpelisib at a medical meeting in the first half of 2025. With that, I'll turn the call over to Tom for a discussion of our financial results.