In This Article:
Compelling Phase 1 safety and efficacy data for FAP-Dox (AVA6000) with preliminary evidence of efficacy in salivary gland cancers and no severe cardiac toxicity
Progression free survival (PFS) data to date represents a near doubling of the benchmarking data in this patient population without reaching median PFS
LONDON and PHILADELPHIA, April 28, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Avacta Therapeutics (AIM: AVCT), a life sciences company developing next generation peptide drug conjugates (PDC) targeting powerful anti-tumor payloads directly to the tumor, today announced Phase 1 data from its lead program FAP-Dox (AVA6000), that were presented alongside preclinical pharmacokinetic results from its second pre|CISION® candidate AVA6103 (FAP-EXd) at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting in Chicago, IL.
Both programs are designed to target fibroblast activation protein-alpha (FAPα), the protease that forms the basis of the pre|CISION® platform. FAP is consistently overexpressed across a broad range of solid tumors and enriched at the tumor-stroma interface, making it an ideal target for tumor-localized drug activation. Avacta’s proprietary pre|CISION® chemistry leverages this tumor-specific biology to activate potent drugs selectively at the tumor site, enhancing efficacy while minimizing systemic toxicity.
"Today’s clinical results mark the achievement of a proof-of-concept milestone with our proprietary pre|CISION® platform demonstrating meaningful activity,” said Christina Coughlin, CEO of Avacta Therapeutics. “With AVA6000 demonstrating strong early signs of efficacy in a specific patient population of salivary gland cancers and a differentiated safety profile, we are not only validating a tumor-targeted approach to cytotoxics delivery – we are establishing a foundation for this new class of precision oncology therapeutics. These data underscore the tremendous potential of our pipeline to deliver meaningful benefits for patients and drive sustained value creation for our key stakeholders.”
AVA6000 (FAP-Dox) Clinical Highlights (Abstract #CT15, Apil 29, 2025)
AVA6000 is a FAP-activated form of doxorubicin designed to reduce the systemic side effects of conventional chemotherapy. In the Phase 1a dose-escalation study, AVA6000 was well-tolerated across both every-three-week (Q3W) and every-two-week (Q2W) dosing regimens. No maximum tolerated dose (MTD) was reached despite dosing up to 385 mg/m² every three weeks.
In patients with salivary gland cancers (SGC, n=11) treated at or above the dose level of 250 mg/m2, AVA6000 demonstrated multiple confirmed responses and a disease control rate of 91%. Median progression-free survival (PFS) has not yet been reached, with median follow-up exceeding 25 weeks (25.3 weeks, 5.9 months). These FAP-Dox PFS results compare favorably to recent benchmarking data in this patient population presented at ESMO 2024, with a reported PFS of 3.5 months (15 weeks) in a large cohort (n=54) in a similar setting of pretreated patients with SGC (Licitra et al. ESMO 2024).