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ASCO-GU 2026 – Protara gets that sinking feeling

TARA-002 goes from looking better than Inlexzo to seeming rather worse.

Protara, the company that last year looked like it might challenge the likes of Johnson & Johnson in bladder cancer, has experienced a sinking feeling familiar to small-cap biotechs: having dosed more patients, its previously trumpeted level of efficacy has ebbed away.

The company’s update concerns the Advanced-2 trial of TARA-002, an inactivated Streptococcus strain, in non-muscle invasive bladder cancer patients unresponsive to BCG. With complete response rates falling from 100% last April to 66% now Protara shares lost 26% on Tuesday as investors took the view that TARA-002 no longer looked competitive against peers like J&J’s Inlexzo.

Inlexzo has been approved in the BCG-unresponsive setting, with a CR rate of 82% at any time in the Sunrise-1 study, while a key challenger that’s due to be filed this year, CG Oncology’s cretostimogene grenadenorepvec, has shown 76% in its Bond-003 trial.

Against such numbers Protara made a splash in December 2024, when the Advance-2 trial yielded data showing an 80% any-time CR rate, or 100% at six months. That concerned just five patients, but the headline number moved up to 100% when all five yielded CRs last April.

Now comes the shock: with 35 patients now evaluable, the any-time CR rate has crashed to 66%. The data also include a 12-month CR rate of just 33% (67% was the figure last year), though given the relatively few patients involved that number will likely change with more maturity.

The results are to be presented in a poster on Friday at the ASCO Genitourinary Cancers symposium, but have been released by Protara in advance. 

 

Cross-trial comparison in BCG-unresponsive NMIBC

 TARA-002InlexzoCreto-vec
CompanyProtara TherapeuticsJ&JCG Oncology
TrialAdvanced-2 (Dec 2024)Advanced-2 (Apr 2025)Advanced-2 (Feb 2026)Sunrise-1Bond-003
CR at any time80% (4/5)100% (5/5)66% (23/35)82% (70/85)76% (83/110)
CR at 6 months100% (4/4)100% (5/5)68% (15/22)76% (65/85)64% (42/66)
CR at 12 months67% (2/3)33% (5/15)46% (39/85)46% (51/110)

Source: OncologyPipeline & Jones Research.

 

Protara does have a second string to its bow, with Advanced-2 also testing NMIBC patients who are naive to BCG therapy, and here at least numbers are holding up, with any-time CR rate of 72% and a 12-month CR rate of 58%.

However, the company now has a problem. It was prioritising the enrolment of BCG-unresponsive patients into Advanced-2, which is designed to be registrational in this population. It’s unclear whether, given the waning of that dataset, the results of Advanced-2’s BCG-unresponsive cohort can still back a filing.

Protara says it has now completed recruitment into the BCG-naive cohort, but here a phase 3 study, Advanced-3, needs to be carried out. It’s possible that Advanced-3 will now become the main focus for TARA-002, and on the plus side the FDA has apparently allowed this pivotal trial to compare against physician’s choice and not against BCG, wrote Jones Research’s Soumit Roy in a note to clients. 

But it’s also an open question whether a 72% CR rate is enough here. That number seems broadly in line with BCG, and being as good as BCG – a cumbersome and inconvenient treatment – without the need to combine with BCG might be enough of a win; however, the number will likely wane in a phase 3 trial, and CG’s creto-vec has shown an any-time CR rate as high as 88%, again eclipsing TARA-002 on a cross-trial basis.

 

The evolution of Protara’s dataset in BCG-naive NIMBC

 Dec 2024Apr 2025Feb 2026
CR at any time67% (10/15)72% (21/29)72% (21/29)
CR at 6 months64% (9/14)69% (18/26)67% (18/27)
CR at 12 months50% (7/14)58% (11/19)

Source: OncologyPipeline & company updates.

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