Ramesh Kumar
Analyst · Maxim Group. Your line is open
Thank you, Caja. Good morning, and welcome to our third quarter 2017 result call. Joining me from Onconova’s management team is our CFO, Mark Guerin. This quarter, we have made a lot of progress and now we're approaching key milestones for our lead clinical programs addressing the needs of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes or MDS. A preplanned interim analysis of the adaptive designed inspired trial for IV rigosertib and patients with high risk MDS is anticipated in the coming months. We're also encouraged by the recent increase in enrollment for this global trial, this suggestfull enrollment can be achieved in the first half of 2018. We're also making solid headway in our rigosertib azacitidine combination program and now are in position to initiate a special protocol assessment process for a Phase III trial early next year. Our preclinical RASopathies program is advancing as planned and last month we held a key opinion leader breakfast in New York to discuss new developments for pediatric patients for RASopathies. Looking ahead, we have two poster presentation at the 2017 ASH meeting, demonstrating long-term transfusion independence in low-risk MDS going out multiple years. All in all, I'm very pleased with the progress in the third quarter and outlook. In addition, we continue to focus on multiple business development initiatives trying to partner both rigosertib geographically in our earlier stage pipeline products. I will no discuss in more detail recent progress in our Phase III inspired trial. Where we are testing the potential of IV rigosertib as an effective life extending second line therapy for MDS patients for whom hypomethylating agents or HME have failed. This is our main focus in our most advanced program. I'm pleased to report that the statistical analysis plan or SAP for both the interim and topline analysis has been reviewed by the FDA and the European Medicines Agency. And based on their guidance, we have now finalized the SAP. In this trial of 225 patients, the interim analysis will be triggered by the ADA-ed deaths event. Based on our modeling, this could take place as early as by the end of year or very early next year. Since the date of interim analysis is tied to reaching a preidentified number of death events, it is not possible to accurately forecast a precise time of completing the interim analysis. Based on the various procedures we have created for the IAA under the SAP, we anticipate that the interim analysis process will be complete within a couple of weeks of reaching the planned number of events. As we have discussed previously, inspired trial design is adaptive and permits choice of options, including a futility analysis and trial expansion using preplanned statistical criteria. The SAP permits two analysis; overall survival and the intent to treat ITT population and in the subgroup of patients classified as having very high risk or VHR MDS as defined by the IPSS-R scoring system for risk. The statistical parameters were success under these scenarios are predefined in the SAP. As a reminder, the inspired trial is being conducted in a targeted population of second line patients and is designed based on learnings from our Phase III on time trial. This study help define subgroups of patients who appeared to experience improvement in the primary endpoint of overall survival. We believe that identification of the patient population most likely to respond helps increase the likelihood of a favorable outcome of the study. As of October 31, the global inspired study had patients enrolled in 22 countries across four continents, North America, Europe, Asia and Australia. They had 170 sites. Only five more sites remain to be open and we expect that this will occur this month. Since we experience a slowdown in enrollment mid-year, we undertook measures just for enrollment including the addition of trial sites in three new countries and changes within the CRO group. These efforts are now paying off. I'm pleased to report that these actions led to a recent increase in the enrollment rate for this trial. As the result, we expect full enrollment to be achieved in the first half of 2018, followed by topline analysis after 176 events in the second half of 2018. Our second advance program is in oral rigosertib plus azacitidine combination as a potential first inline therapy for patients with high risk MDS. After completion of the Phase II study in 2016, we obtained regulatory guidance from the FDA and EMA and then started an expansion phase of the trial. We are now awaiting the results of this expansion trial. Once the expansion trial is complete, expected by year-end, we plan to design and submit the pivotal Phase III protocol to the FDA in the first half of 2018 under the SPA process. The expansion trial is designed to enroll up to approximately 40 patients, more than half of the trial has been accrued in multiple sites in the USA. Based on this encouraging progress, we have decided to limit the trial to U.S. sites only. The Phase III trial design is a one-to-one randomized control trial of oral rigosertib plus azacitidine compared with azacitidine plus placebo in first line patients with high risk MDS. Initiation of the Phase III trial which is planned to be conducted globally requires additional financing or business development transactions or a combination of both. We plan to present initial data from this expanded study at a scientific conference in early 2018 highlighting the results of those selection and optimization of the combination regimen. Previously presented data demonstrates that the combination therapy may overcome hypomethylating agent resistance and also indicates that further study of rigosertib and Acute Myeloid Leukemia [AML] is warranted. Given that as many as 30% of MDS patients go on to develop AML, it is also intention to study AML in the future. The advancement of our two lead programs during this quarter is complemented by recent advances in our collaborative RASopathies or front row program. We have initiated a multi-institutional collaboration to evaluate rigosertib in pediatric RASopathies which may provide additional potential markets for rigosertib. The collaborators include major national institutes such as the NCI, academic institutes and nonprofits. RASopathies or related genetic syndromes usually caused by mutations that all to the RASo family and mitogen activated protein or MAP kinases that control signal transduction. In mid-October, we hosted a key opinion leader meeting in New York to discuss novel approaches to RASopathies. The meeting featured presentations by Dr. Bruce Gelb of Mount Sinai and Dr. Elliot Stieglitz of the University of California, San Francisco. They discussed new developments for pediatric patients with RASopathies. I'm also pleased to report that we have completed and expect to sign a CREDA, Collaborative Research and Development Agreement with the U.S. National Institutes of Health to advance rigosertib in pediatric clinical trials at the NCI. This trial is expected to start next year and will be funded by the NIH. Also, in the third quarter, we entered into strategic collaboration with Cellectar Biosciences to develop new phospholipid drug conjugates combining select proprietary compounds or payloads from our early stage product pipeline to select our patented phospholipid ether delivery platform. We are encouraged by the progress in our late stage programs in the exciting developments underway in our earlier stage programs and collaborations. I will now turn the call over to Mark Guerin, Onconova's Chief Financial Officer for a discussion of our financial results in the quarter.