FibroGen Announces Publication of Results from Phase 1 Monotherapy Study of FG-3246 in Patients with Metastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer in the Journal of Clinical Oncology

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FibroGen, Inc.
FibroGen, Inc.
  • FG-3246 showed encouraging anti-cancer activity with an acceptable safety profile in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer

  • Initiation of Phase 2 monotherapy dose optimization study of FG-3246 in mCRPC expected by mid-2025

SAN FRANCISCO, March 28, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- FibroGen, Inc. (NASDAQ: FGEN) today announced the peer-reviewed publication titled “A Phase 1, First-in-Human Study of FOR46 (FG-3246), an Immune-Modulating Antibody-Drug Conjugate Targeting CD46, in Patients with Metastatic Castration Resistant Prostate Cancer” in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. The manuscript includes the complete results from the Fortis Therapeutics-sponsored Phase 1 study of FOR46 (now known as FG-3246), a potential first-in-class anti-CD46 antibody drug conjugate (ADC) with an MMAE-containing payload, in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC).

“I am excited to see the results from the Phase 1 monotherapy study of FOR46 (FG-3246) published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. This is the first clinical trial targeting CD46 in patients with prostate cancer, and the totality of the data highlights the promising potential of FG-3246 anti-cancer activity, especially when considering the unselected, heavily pre-treated patient population in the trial. The trial results provide key insights into the potential clinical impact of targeting CD46 in the treatment of mCRPC and support its further development in this disease space with high unmet need,” said Dr. Rahul Aggarwal, Professor of Medicine at the University of California San Francisco, and Principal Investigator of the study.

“We are looking forward to advancing FG-3246 in the clinic and remain on track for initiating the Phase 2 monotherapy study by mid-2025 as well as disclosing topline results from the combination trial of FG-3246 and enzalutamide in the second half of 2025,” added Thane Wettig, Chief Executive Officer of FibroGen. “FG-3246 represents a potential first-in-class, non-PSMA approach to treating mCRPC and we, along with the medical community, are excited about the potential for CD46 to become a next generation target in the prostate cancer treatment paradigm.”

This Phase 1 study was a multi-center, first-in-human, open label dose escalation and expansion study evaluating the safety, tolerability, and anti-tumor activity as measured by the decline of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) from baseline, objective tumor response rate in patients with measurable disease, and radiographic progression free survival (rPFS). The completed Phase 1 trial includes a total of 56 patients from the dose-escalation and dose-expansion cohorts. Notably, patients were biomarker unselected and heavily pre-treated, having received a median of 5 lines of therapy prior to receiving FG-3246.