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Another Roche TIGIT disappointment

Skyscraper-07 fails, while a Poseida-originated Car-T is also scrapped.

Hopes for Roche’s anti-TIGIT MAb tiragolumab are already low following various failures, and the company has just sneaked another flop into its first-quarter earnings presentation. The group disclosed that it was removing tiragolumab in oesophageal cancer from its pipeline after disappointment in the Skyscraper-07 trial.

Roche also binned P-MUC1C-ALLO1, one of the Car-T projects it gained via its $1bn acquisition of Poseida in November. As for new additions, the company and its Chugai division are taking into the clinic a mystery asset known only as MINT91.

Oesophageal angst

The writing was on the wall for tiragolumab with the failure of its big trial, Skyscraper-01, in first-line non-small cell lung cancer, last year.

However, there were still a few pivotal studies to read out, including Skyscraper-07, testing Tecentriq with or without tiragolumab as first-line maintenance in unresectable oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma.

On Thursday Roche removed oesophageal cancer as a potential use for tiragolumab, and cited the end of phase 3 in locally advanced disease, without spelling out the study’s failure. When asked, a Roche spokesperson confirmed that Skyscraper-07 hadn’t met its primary endpoint.

Roche previously claimed a win in a first-line oesophageal trial, Skyscraper-08, but this used an outdated comparator, and in January the company ditched this setting, too.

At that time Roche also abandoned tiragolumab in head and neck cancer, where the phase 2 Skyscraper-09 study had been ongoing.

This leaves two phase 3 trials yet to report: Skyscraper-03, in first-line maintenance in stage III NSCLC, and Skyscraper-14, in first-line liver cancer, with results from both due later this year, according to the Roche spokesperson. But investors won’t be holding out much hope.

MUC1 & MINT91

Another first-quarter casualty is P-MUC1C-ALLO1, which had been in a phase 1 solid tumour study. The asset came via the acquisition of Poseida, and at the time it was flagged as a potential driver of the deal; more advanced Car-Ts targeting BCMA and CD19 x CD20 were already the subject of a 2022 licensing agreement.

With P-MUC1C-ALLO1 Poseida had been upping the dose of chemo for lymphodepletion in its study, with safety and biomarker data featuring at the ESMO-IO meeting in December. However, these clearly weren’t enough to tempt Roche to continue.

Roche also gained Poseida’s manufacturing capabilities, as well as two early-stage non-viral gene therapy projects in hereditary angioedema and haemophilia, although the latest discontinuation is a black mark against the group’s deal-making nous.

As for the mystery MINT91, the company declined to give more details on the project or its mechanism of action.

 

Selected oncology pipeline changes at Roche

ProjectMechanismClinical statusNote
What’s in?
MINT91UnknownPh1 in solid tumoursChugai project
What’s out?
Tiragolumab in oesophageal cancerAnti-TIGIT MAbSkyscraper-07 failedFollow previous failures incl Skyscraper-01 in 1st-line NSCLC; only realistic hope is liver cancer (Skyscraper-14)
P-MUC1C-ALLO1Allogeneic tumour-associated MUC1 Car-TPh1 in solid tumoursGained via $1bn acquisition of Poseida in Nov 2024

Source: company presentation & OncologyPipeline.

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