90% of high-risk patients have liver metastases -- -- Short-term molecular response (as defined by protocol) is uninformative due to an unexpectedly persi">

Gritstone bio Announces Positive Preliminary Progression-free Survival and Long-term Circulating Tumor DNA (ctDNA) Data from Phase 2 Portion of Ongoing Phase 2/3 Study of its Personalized Cancer Vaccine, GRANITE, in Front-line Metastatic Microsatellite Stable Colorectal Cancer (MSS-CRC)

Gritstone bio
Gritstone bio

In This Article:

-- Early progression-free survival (PFS) trends favor GRANITE recipients with hazard ratios of 0.82 in the overall population ([95% CI, 0.34-1.67]; 62% censored) and 0.52 (48% relative risk reduction of progression or death with GRANITE vs. control) in a high-risk group, where clinical data are more mature ([95% CI, 0.15-1.38]; 44% censored); >90% of high-risk patients have liver metastases --

-- Short-term molecular response (as defined by protocol) is uninformative due to an unexpectedly persistent ctDNA drop beyond induction chemotherapy; long-term circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) responses align with PFS trends and favor GRANITE vs. control patients --

-- GRANITE was generally well-tolerated with manageable adverse events; no patients have discontinued GRANITE due to adverse events --

-- Mature PFS data expected in the third quarter of 2024; overall survival data expected in 1H 2025 --

EMERYVILLE, Calif., April 01, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Gritstone bio, Inc. (Nasdaq: GRTS), a clinical-stage biotechnology company working to develop the world’s most potent vaccines, today announced positive preliminary data from the ongoing, signal seeking Phase 2 portion of the Phase 2/3 study evaluating GRANITE, its personalized neoantigen cancer vaccine, in front-line metastatic microsatellite stable colorectal cancer (MSS-CRC). The randomized, controlled, open-label study is designed to quantify the clinical benefit of maintenance therapy with GRANITE (GRT-C901/GRT-R902) in combination with immune checkpoint blockade in addition to fluoropyrimidine/bevacizumab versus fluoropyrimidine/bevacizumab alone. Overall progression free survival (PFS) data show an early trend in benefit for GRANITE patients (HR=0.82, [95% CI, 0.34-1.67]; 62% censored) and extended PFS benefit in high-risk patients (HR=0.52 [95% CI, 0.15-1.38]; 44% censored), in whom progression occurs faster. Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis over several months of treatment shows the expected relationship with disease progression and favors GRANITE, while short-term ctDNA response analysis (molecular response as defined per protocol) did not demonstrate a difference between study arms. Gritstone bio successfully manufactured GRANITE product candidate for every eligible patient (i.e., 100% vaccine manufacturing success rate).

“Today's preliminary Phase 2 results are highly encouraging and represent the first randomized trial evidence, albeit early, that a personalized neoantigen-directed vaccine can potentially drive efficacy in a metastatic ‘cold’ tumor. The overall trend of PFS improvement in GRANITE recipients is great to see, and the exploratory PFS hazard ratio of 0.52 in the high-risk group, a more mature dataset, is a striking signal,” said Andrew Allen, MD, PhD, Co-founder, President & CEO of Gritstone bio. “Pioneering new spaces carries inherent risks, and with regard to defining molecular response, we simply got it wrong. ctDNA levels in both arms decreased on chemotherapy for longer than we anticipated, generating similar short-term molecular response rates across arms and rendering our protocol measure of ctDNA change uninformative. Fortunately, long-term analysis demonstrates the expected correlation of ctDNA with clinical benefit and favors GRANITE patients. We believe these preliminary findings put us in a strong position to share mature PFS data in the third quarter and then enter regulatory discussions regarding Phase 3. The growing body of evidence favoring GRANITE in this trial, including positive PFS and long-term ctDNA trends in both high and low-risk populations, is exciting and suggests GRANITE is working in this notoriously underserved patient population.”