Zentalis Pharmaceuticals Presents Updated Clinical Data at the Society of Gynecologic Oncology 2025 Annual Meeting on Women’s Cancer

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ZENTALIS PHARMACEUTICALS
ZENTALIS PHARMACEUTICALS

Azenosertib median duration of response (mDOR) updated to 6.3 months in the ongoing DENALI Part 1b clinical trial in patients with platinum-resistant ovarian cancer (PROC) and continues to demonstrate an objective response rate (ORR) of ~35% in response-evaluable patients

On track to initiate Part 2 of the ongoing DENALI clinical trial in 1H 2025, with registration-intent topline data anticipated by year end 2026

Company also presents preclinical combination data of azenosertib with microtubule inhibitor-based antibody drug conjugates (ADCs) demonstrating synergistic antitumor effects

SAN DIEGO, March 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Zentalis® Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Nasdaq: ZNTL), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing a potentially first-in-class and best-in-class WEE1 inhibitor for patients with ovarian cancer and other tumor types, today announced updated clinical data from Part 1b of the ongoing DENALI clinical trial of azenosertib in patients with PROC in an oral presentation at the Society of Gynecologic Oncology (SGO) 2025 Annual Meeting on Women’s Cancer.

DENALI Part 1b is a Phase 2 single-arm study that evaluated azenosertib monotherapy at the 400mg QD 5:2 dose (once daily, five days on, two days off, or the “intermittent schedule”) in patients with PROC (n=102).

As of the January 13, 2025 data cutoff, patients with Cyclin E1+ PROC tumors who were response-evaluable (patients who had at least one scan after receiving azenosertib) demonstrated an ORR of 34.9% (15/43; 95% CI: 21.0 - 50.9). In the intent-to-treat patients with Cyclin E1+ PROC (patients who received at least one dose of azenosertib), the ORR was 31.3% (15/48; 95% CI: 18.7 - 46.3), and an mDOR of 6.3 months (95% CI: 2.7 – not estimable). The mDOR is subject to change since there were patients with ongoing responses as of the cutoff date.

The presentation also demonstrates Cyclin E1 protein overexpression, regardless of CCNE1 gene amplification, as a sensitive and specific predictive biomarker that can be used to identify patients who could potentially derive benefit from azenosertib. Zentalis estimates that about half of PROC patients overexpress Cyclin E1 based on its proprietary immunohistochemistry cutoff.

As of the January 13, 2025 data cutoff, the safety and tolerability profile was consistent with the safety and tolerability profile from the Company’s January 29, 2025 investor event, which included data based off a cutoff date of December 2, 2024, with no new safety findings. Gastrointestinal toxicities and fatigue were found to be the most common treatment-related adverse events.