phase 1 trial of cobomarsen, an inhibitor of mir-155, in ... · jak/stat, nf b and pi3k signaling...

1
Phase 1 Trial of Cobomarsen, an Inhibitor of miR-155, in Mycosis Fungoides Christiane Querfeld 1 , Francine M. Foss 2 , Lauren Pinter-Brown 3 , Basem M. William 4 , Herbert Eradat 5 , Youn Kim 6 , Joan Guitart 7 , Auris Huen 8 , Theresa Pacheco 9 , Bradley Haverkos 9 , Jennifer DeSimone 10 , Pierluigi Porcu 11 , Ahmad Halwani 12 , Anita Seto 13 , Kristin Schroeder 14 , Ioanna Cheronis 14 , Brent A. Dickinson 14 , Catherine A. Nicholas 14 , Joshua Lynch 14 , Aimee L. Jackson 14 , Linda A. Pestano 14 , Paul J. Williams, Jr. 14 , William S. Marshall 14 , Paul Rubin 14 , Diana M. Escolar 14 1 City of Hope, Duarte, CA, 2 Yale Cancer Center, New Haven, CT, 3 University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, 4 Division of Hematology, The Ohio State University, OH, 5 University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, 6 Stanford Cancer Institute, Stanford University, CA, 7 Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, 8 MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, 9 University of Colorado, Aurora, CO, 10 Inova, Fairfax, VA, 11 Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA, 12 Huntsman Cancer Center, Salt Lake City, UT, 13 Expansion Therapeutics, Inc. San Diego, CA, 14 miRagen Therapeutics, Inc. Boulder, Colorado, U.S.A. No consistent or clinically significant changes in T or B cell subsets (including CD4, CD8, Treg, and B cells), or in monocytes or eosinophils NK cell counts increased in several patients treated with the highest cobomarsen dose (900 mg), though the relationship to drug administration is unclear with the small data set Subjects that had common infections (URI) during the study showed normal activated T and B cell expansion and contractions Cobomarsen is well tolerated at doses ranging from 300-900 mg in CTCL. The doses studied after systemic administration appear to represent the top of the dose response curve 63% of subjects receiving more than 6 doses of the selected dose for phase II (300 mg IV infusion) had a partial response (PR) and 50% reached an ORR4 All evaluable subjects (n=5) showed improvement of lesions with direct cobomarsen injection. Target engagement and predicted pathway modulation was proven with IT injection 92% of subjects at any dose with systemic mode of administration showed improvement in mSWAT score 52% of subjects receiving more than 1 cycle (6 doses) had a partial response (≥50% reduction in mSWAT score) Responses are durable: 77% of the 13 subjects that achieved a PR maintained a response for at least 4 consecutive months (ORR4 based on mSWAT). Mean duration of response is 276 days (range: 48 – 582+ days) Quality of life, measured as mean Skindex-29 total score, improved in 88% of evaluable subjects throughout the study (N=17) PK is linear with a long terminal half-life (~2 1/2 to 3 weeks) Indicated authors are employees and stock/option holders of miRagen Therapeutics, Inc. Special thanks to all patients that participated in the study, to the sites’ study coordinators and sub-PIs CLINICAL TRIAL DESIGN SAFETY IMMUNOPHENOTYPING PHARMACOKINETICS EFFICACY BASELINE DEMOGRAPHICS CONCLUSIONS Part A Lesion Biopsies Have Expected Gene Expression Changes and Lower Clonality After Cobomarsen Treatment Leading to Improved CAILS Thirty-three of Thirty-six Subjects (92%) Treated Systemically with Cobomarsen Have Shown mSWAT Score Improvement Plasma concentration curves are multi-compartmental with a long terminal elimination phase Cobomarsen displays linear kinetics, with dose proportional increases in C max and AUC across dose groups No evidence of accumulation at the highest doses tested for any route of administration Plasma trough values reach steady state in 12-16 weeks of dosing suggesting a terminal half life of approximately 2.5 to 3 weeks Increased trough values were observed in 3 patients that were later identified as having IgG anti-drug antibodies (ADAs); no effects on safety or efficacy were correlated with the presence of ADAs in these patients. 5 of 42 (12%) subjects subsequently screened were positive for ADAs No serious AEs have been attributed to cobomarsen. Eight serious adverse events (SAEs) have been reported in 4 subjects. These SAEs were either related to underlying disease (known complications of the CTCL patient population) or related to other comorbidities in these subjects, and unrelated to study treatment Thirty-nine subjects (90.7%) have reported at least 1 non-serious AE, for a total of 307 unique AEs The maximum severity of AEs has been Grade 1/Grade 2 (275 of 307 events [89.6%]) or Grade 3/Grade 4 (32 of 307 events [10.4%]) Of the 32 Grade 3/Grade 4 events,14 events in 6 subjects (all in Part B) were assessed to be related Table 1. Grade 3, Grade 4 and Serious Adverse Events, regardless of attribution, in patients who received ≥ 1 dose of cobomarsen in Parts A and B (N=43). SOC PT = System Organ Class Preferred Term Table 2. Most common AEs reported in ≥ 10% of patients who received at least one dose of cobomarsen (N=43), either as monotherapy or in addition to stable doses of background therapy (combo). Cobomarsen (MRG-106) miR-155-5p Inhibitor Cobomarsen is a chemically synthesized, phosphorothioate oligonucleotide, 14 nucleotides in length, that contains a mixture of deoxyribonucleotides and 2'-O, 4'-C-methylene-β-d- ribonucleotides (LNA) Genome-wide expression analysis demonstrates that cobomarsen regulates numerous genes implicated in cell cycle and apoptosis, consistent with the pharmacologic impact on cell survival A subset of these genes has been identified as potentially translatable biomarkers to monitor cobomarsen activity in clinical samples Role of MicroRNA-155 in CTCL Epigenetic alterations have been implicated in the pathogenesis of lymphomas and leukemias including CTCL. miRNA profiling and RT-PCR discriminate CTCL and non-malignant inflammation with high accuracy. miR-155 is overexpressed in CTCL skin lesions and is involved in tumor progression JAK/STAT, NFB and PI3K signaling pathways are regulated by miR-155 and are activated in CTCL leading to uncontrolled clonal cell expansion A) Log2 fold-change in gene expression for drug or saline treatment vs. pretreatment for each individual biopsy. Shown are 122 genes regulated in the same direction by MRG-106 in all 4 lesions. Red = increased expression relative to the median for all samples; blue = decreased expression relative to the median for all samples. B) Cobomarsen tissue concentration detected by mass spectrometry in each biopsy. BLOQ = below the level of quantitation for the assay C) The individual lesion Composite Assessment of Index Lesion Severity (CAILS) score was obtained by adding the severity score of each of the following categories: erythema, scaling, plaque elevation, and surface area. The maximum score achievable is 50. The change over time in CAILS scores (normalized to 100% at baseline) is presented graphically. D) VDJ Sequencing (T Cell Repertoire) completed at Adaptive Biotechnologies to identify oncogenic clone frequency for biopsies collected for Part A subjects pre-treatment or post MRG-106 treatment on Day 9, 24 hours after the last dose. Clonality quantitates the extent of mono- or oligoclonal expansion by measuring the shape of the clone frequency distribution. Values range from 0 to 1, where values approaching 1 indicate a nearly monoclonal population. Five of Eight (63%) Subjects Treated with Cobomarsen Administered as a 300 mg IV-infusion Achieved a PR; 50% Reached an ORR4 normal skin pre-tx biopsies Part A post-tx biopsies Part A pre-tx biopsies Part B post-tx biopsies Part B post last treatment (16 to 36 days) 0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 3000 3250 3500 miR-155 copy number/10 pg RNA LLOQ miR-155 Detection Decreases in Lesion Biopsies After Cobomarsen Treatment Figure 3. mSWAT score represents best score achieved while on study for 36 patients who had evaluable mSWAT scores as of the data cutoff (09JAN2019). Duration of response (days) as of 09JAN2019 for each evaluable patient achieving a 50% reduction in mSWAT score is shown in individual bar. NE = Not Evaluable; patients not allowed to continue on trial as per protocol or lost to follow up. Subgroup of 122 mRNAs were modulated in common in lesion biopsy after cobomarsen treatment compared to a pre-treatment biopsy from the same lesion (Figure 2A) Modulated pathways include decreases in gene expression in key CTCL disease pathways (PI3K/AKT, JAK/STAT and NFB pathways) as well as increased gene expression in pathways involved in apoptosis The common gene signature correlates with cobomarsen concentration in the lesions (Figure 2B) All evaluable Part A lesions directly injected with cobomarsen had improved CAILS scores (Fig. 2C) and decreased tumor cell clones when assessed by TCR sequencing on Study Day 9 (Figure 2D) Pretreatment miR-155-5p expression levels quantitated by qPCR were elevated in the majority of CTCL patients compared to normal skin Highest levels of miR-155 were found in tumor lesions that had the highest density of neoplastic cells Intralesional and systemic cobomarsen treatment led to loss of miR- 155 detection in the majority of subjects that was maintained up to 36 days post the last dose (EOS visit) Figure 2 Cobomarsen has Similar Efficacy when Administered as Monotherapy or in Combination with Stable Regimens of Other CTCL Systemic Therapies Concomitant medication N Median time (min, max) on therapy prior to study day 1 bexarotene 12 12 months (2, 37) interferon-alfa 2 24 months (16, 31) methotrexate 2 20 months (20, 20) other* 6 13 months (3, 112) Quality of Life Improved as Measured by Skindex-29 Total Score Skindex-29 total score: maximal improvement and mean improvement throughout the duration of study (Figure 7) Quality of life (QOL) improvement occurs mostly in patients that received > 6 doses of cobomarsen Figure 7. Skindex-29 total scores: maximal % change from baseline (green bars) and mean % change across the duration of study (grey bars); evaluable patients (n=17) are those who had a baseline measure and participated in Part B of the study. No Evidence of Immunosuppression in Subjects Treated with Cobomarsen for up to 23 Months Figure 1. The absolute cell count was determined by CBC for neutrophils A), and by flow cytometry for the major lymphocyte populations, B) B cells, C) NK cells, D) CD8 T cells, E) CD4 T cells, and F) CD4+CD25+ T regulatory cells. The graphs depict fold change from baseline (C1D1) in cell count. The average fold change was calculated per cohort, legend indicates number of patients per cohort. Figure 4. miR-155-5p copy number in lesion biopsies taken before and after cobomarsen treatment from CTCL subjects enrolled in Parts A and B compared to normal skin biopsies from healthy donors Figure 5. A) % change in mSWAT score represents best score achieved while on study for the 8 subjects in the 300 mg IV-infusion cohort. Duration of response (days) is indicated by the number below the bar for subjects achieving a PR as of 09JAN2019. NE = Not evaluable. B) Lesion photographs taken at baseline and over the course of cobomarsen treatment from subject 112-001 in the 300 mg IV-infusion cohort. Figure 6. Percent change from baseline mSWAT score represents best score achieved while on study for subjects treated with cobomarsen as monotherapy (n=14) or in combination with other CTCL systemic therapies (n=22). A B Open-label, dose-ranging, multiple dose, study of intra-tumoral, subcutaneous, and intravenous administration of cobomarsen, an oligonucleotide inhibitor of microRNA miR155- 5p, in subjects with CTCL, MF sub-type. Primary Objective To investigate the safety and tolerability of multiple intra-tumoral (IT), subcutaneous (SC), and intravenous (IV) administrations of cobomarsen Secondary Objectives To characterize the pharmacokinetic profile, the recommended Phase 2 dose and route, and to evaluate the efficacy of cobomarsen in this population Main Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria Biopsy proven MF, Clinical Stage I-III, Large Cell Transformation included Subjects refractory to or intolerant to established therapy. Subjects could remain on stable doses of background therapy No evidence of clinically meaningful visceral, nodal or blood involvement related to CTCL No clinically significant laboratory, cardiac, renal, hepatic, or other medical conditions Part A Intra-tumoral delivery of cobomarsen 75 mg dose Cobomarsen Placebo Pretreatment biopsy Placebo biopsy Cobomarsen biopsy Part B Systemic administration by subcutaneous (SC) injection or 2-hour IV infusion at 300, 600, or 900 mg or IV bolus (300 mg only) Loading dose (3x/week) for 1 week followed by weekly dosing Pretreatment biopsy Disease assessments Monthly Composite Assessment of Index Lesion Severity (CAILS) and Modified Severity Weighted Assessment Tool (mSWAT) Clinical signs and symptoms, safety laboratory, ECG, adverse event monitoring CT scans and flow cytometry at screening and when all criteria for a CR are met Monthly Quality of Life CLINICAL TRIAL SUBJECT FLOW Acknowledgements and Disclosures BACKGROUND PART A (n = 6) PART B (n = 37) TOTAL (n = 43) AEs (SOC PT) SAE Grade 3/4 SAE Grade 3/4 SAE Grade 3/4 Neutropenia* 5 5 Lymphopenia 1 1 2 Hypophosphotemia 1 1 2 Leukopenia 2 2 Hyperuricaemia 2 2 Hypertriglyceridaemia 2 2 Tumor flare 2 2 Cellulitis 1 1 1 1 Sepsis 1 1 1 1 CPK increased 1 1 Hypercalcemia 1 1 1 1 Hypokalaemia 1 1 Hyponatraemia 1 1 Angina Pectoris 1 1 1 1 Coronary artery disease 1 1 1 1 Tumor pain 1 1 Erythema 1 1 Pruritus 1 1 Rash 1 1 Skin infection 1 1 1 1 Acute kidney injury 1 1 Palpitations 1 1 1 1 Orthopnoea 1 1 TOTAL 3 5 5 27 8 32 Screened = 51 Enrolled = 43 Part A: Intra-lesional Enrolled = 6 Completed = 5 Discontinued due to SAE = 1 Part B: Systemic Enrolled=37 Received > 6 systemic doses per amended protocol N = 25 All systemically treated, excluding a Sezary patient N = 36 Ongoing = 4; Completed = 11 Discontinued = 20 Lost to FU = 1 Screen failures = 8 Enrollment closed, missed deadline = 1 Did not meet I/E criteria = 7 Excluded from efficacy analysis due to I/E (Sezary Sx) = 1 Part A (Intra‐ tumoral) N (%) Part B (Subcutaneous) N (%) Part B (IV, 2 hr infusion) N (%) Part B (IV Bolus) N (%) Total N (%) Demographic 75mg (6) 300mg (3) 600mg (3) 900mg (3) 300mg (8) 600mg (8) 900mg (3) 300mg (9) Total (43) Sex Female 1 (17) 1 (33) 1 (33) 0 (0) 3 (38) 2 (25) 1 (33) 5 (56) 14 (33) Male 5 (83) 2 (67) 2 (67) 3 (100) 5 (63) 6 (75) 2 (67) 4 (44) 29 (67) Age Range 18 ‐ 45 0 (0) 0 (0) 2 (67) 0 (0) 2 (25) 0 (0) 1 (33) 0 (0) 5 (12) 46 ‐ 65 6 (100) 3 (100) 1 (33) 3 (100) 5 (63) 6 (75) 1 (33) 4 (44) 29 (67) > 65 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (13) 2 (25) 1 (33) 5 (56) 9 (21) Age N 6 3 3 3 8 8 3 9 43 Mean (SD) 59 (6) 57 (6) 41 (21) 62 (3) 52 (16) 62 (10) 59 (13) 65 (14) 58 (13) Median 61 59 41 64 53 59 63 70 59 Min, Max 50,64 50,61 21,62 59,64 28,75 53,85 45,70 47,84 21,85 Race Asian 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (13) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (2) Black 1 (17) 0 (0) 1 (33) 0 (0) 2 (25) 2 (25) 0 (0) 1 (11) 7 (16) Not reported 1 (17) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (2) Other, specify 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (33) 1 (13) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 2 (5) White/Caucasian 4 (67) 3 (100) 2 (67) 2 (67) 4 (50) 6 (75) 3 (100) 8 (89) 32 (74) Ethnicity Hispanic 1 (17) 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (33) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 2 (5) Non‐Hispanic 5 (83) 3 (100) 3 (100) 2 (67) 8 (100) 8 (100) 3 (100) 9 (100) 41 (95) AE Table Worst Grade Occurring >= 10% of Subjects Mono vs Combo Therapy Subjects Preferred Term Mono n (%) (18) Combo n (%) (25) Total n (%) (43) Fatigue 5 (28) 6 (24) 11 (26) Neutropenia* 1 (6) 7 (28) 8 (19) Pruritus 3 (17) 4 (16) 7 (16) Nausea 2 (11) 5 (20) 7 (16) Headache 4 (22) 3 (12) 7 (16) Tumor flare 2 (11) 5 (20) 7 (16) Injection site pain 2 (11) 4 (16) 6 (14) Constipation 4 (22) 2 (8) 6 (14) Diarrhoea 3 (17) 2 (8) 5 (12) Blood creatine phosphokinase increased 2 (11) 3 (12) 5 (12) Back pain 2 (11) 3 (12) 5 (12) Upper respiratory tract infection 2 (11) 3 (12) 5 (12) *Other medications include single patients on pralatrexate, methoxsalen, brentuximab, gemcitabine, gamma interferon or romidepsin *Neutropenia is transient, mostly in subjects on concomitant medications that had Grade 1-2 neutropenia at baseline. Subject 112-001: 300 mg IV-inf A B C D E F none 1 tx -100 -75 -50 -25 0 25 50 Greatest mSWAT score improvement of systemically-treated subjects (N=36) % change from baseline concomitant systemic med for CTCL n=14 n=22 300 mg 600 mg 900 mg 113 - 0 0 2 1 02 - 0 1 1 1 12 - 0 0 6 1 01 - 0 0 9 102 - 0 1 4 1 12 - 0 0 1 1 02 - 0 0 7 1 07 - 0 0 3 -100 -90 -80 -70 -60 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 Change in mSWAT Score (%) 300 mg IV-inf * * Treatment is ongoing ORR4 ORR4 ORR4 214 582 393 148 NE Stage: # doses rec'd: 13 17 77 9 26 11 34 27 IB IB IB IIB IA IIB IB IB ORR4 106-002 101-003 111-001 106-001 105-002 102-004 101-002 105-003 102-005 108-001 113-001 113-002 108-003 112-008 105-005 103-002 112-003 102-011 108-002 112-006 101-009 102-008 102-009 102-014 112-001 102-007 107-003 112-004 105-004 106-003 111-002 112-005 104-001 103-001 101-004 102-010 -100 -90 -80 -70 -60 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30 Best Change in mSWAT Score (%) 300 mg 600 mg 900 mg Subcutaneous IV Bolus IV Infusion * treatment ongoing * * # doses rec'd: baseline mSWAT: 6 9 103 43 20 58 178 59 5 17 2 47 43 180 27 82 22 6 132 71 66 2 54 85 6 11 86 18 78 100 18 33 20 18 178 54 560 126 6 8 NE NE 4 95 2 14 5 82 393 154 357 1 81 4 8 5 2 NE stage: IIA IB IA IIB IIB IB IA IIA IB IIB IB IIB IIIA IIB IIB IB IB IB IIB IB IIB IIB IB IB IB IB IA IA IIB IIA IB IIIB IIA IIA IB IB 79 26 29 77 27 6 56 6 85 41 27 9 6 6 6 3 11 9 9 10 33 6 6 10 6 11 5 32 12 9 13 7 17 6 14 34 148

Upload: others

Post on 03-Nov-2020

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Phase 1 Trial of Cobomarsen, an Inhibitor of miR-155, in ... · JAK/STAT, NF B and PI3K signaling pathways are regulated by miR-155 and are activated in ... A subjects pre-treatment

Phase 1 Trial of Cobomarsen, an Inhibitor of miR-155, in Mycosis FungoidesChristiane Querfeld1, Francine M. Foss2, Lauren Pinter-Brown3, Basem M. William4, Herbert Eradat5, Youn Kim6, Joan Guitart7, Auris Huen8, Theresa Pacheco9, Bradley Haverkos9, Jennifer DeSimone10, Pierluigi Porcu11, Ahmad Halwani12, Anita Seto13, Kristin Schroeder14, Ioanna Cheronis14, Brent A. Dickinson14, Catherine A. Nicholas14, Joshua Lynch14, Aimee L. Jackson14, Linda A. Pestano14, Paul J. Williams, Jr.14, William S. Marshall14 , Paul Rubin14, Diana M. Escolar14

1 City of Hope, Duarte, CA, 2 Yale Cancer Center, New Haven, CT, 3 University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, 4 Division of Hematology, The Ohio State University, OH, 5 University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, 6 Stanford Cancer Institute, Stanford University, CA, 7 Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, 8 MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, 9 University of Colorado, Aurora, CO, 10 Inova, Fairfax, VA, 11 Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA, 12 Huntsman Cancer Center, Salt Lake City, UT, 13 Expansion Therapeutics, Inc. San Diego, CA, 14 miRagen Therapeutics, Inc. Boulder, Colorado, U.S.A.

No consistent or clinically significant changes in T or B cell subsets (including CD4, CD8, Treg, and B cells), or in monocytes or eosinophils

NK cell counts increased in several patients treated with the highest cobomarsen dose (900 mg), though the relationship to drug administration is unclear with the small data set

Subjects that had common infections (URI) during the study showed normal activated T and B cell expansion and contractions

Cobomarsen is well tolerated at doses ranging from 300-900 mg in CTCL. The doses studied after systemic administration appear torepresent the top of the dose response curve

63% of subjects receiving more than 6 doses of the selected dose for phase II (300 mg IV infusion) had a partial response (PR) and 50% reached an ORR4

All evaluable subjects (n=5) showed improvement of lesions with direct cobomarsen injection. Target engagement and predicted pathway modulation was proven with IT injection

92% of subjects at any dose with systemic mode of administration showed improvement in mSWAT score 52% of subjects receiving more than 1 cycle (6 doses) had a partial response (≥50% reduction in mSWAT score) Responses are durable: 77% of the 13 subjects that achieved a PR maintained a response for at least 4 consecutive months (ORR4

based on mSWAT). Mean duration of response is 276 days (range: 48 – 582+ days) Quality of life, measured as mean Skindex-29 total score, improved in 88% of evaluable subjects throughout the study (N=17) PK is linear with a long terminal half-life (~2 1/2 to 3 weeks)

► Indicated authors are employees and stock/option holders of miRagen Therapeutics, Inc. Special thanks to all patients that participated in the study, tothe sites’ study coordinators and sub-PIs

CLINICAL TRIAL DESIGN

SAFETY

IMMUNOPHENOTYPING

PHARMACOKINETICS

EFFICACY

BASELINE DEMOGRAPHICS

CONCLUSIONS

Part A Lesion Biopsies Have Expected Gene Expression Changes and Lower Clonality After Cobomarsen Treatment Leading to Improved CAILS

Thirty-three of Thirty-six Subjects (92%) Treated Systemically with Cobomarsen Have Shown mSWAT Score Improvement

Plasma concentration curves are multi-compartmental with a long terminal elimination phase Cobomarsen displays linear kinetics, with dose proportional increases in Cmax and AUC

across dose groups No evidence of accumulation at the highest doses tested for any route of administration Plasma trough values reach steady state in 12-16 weeks of dosing suggesting a terminal half

life of approximately 2.5 to 3 weeks Increased trough values were observed in 3 patients that were later identified as having IgG

anti-drug antibodies (ADAs); no effects on safety or efficacy were correlated with the presence of ADAs in these patients. 5 of 42 (12%) subjects subsequently screened were positive for ADAs

No serious AEs have been attributed to cobomarsen. Eight serious adverse events (SAEs) have been reported in 4 subjects. These SAEs were either related to underlying disease (known complications of the CTCL patient population) or related to other comorbidities in these subjects, and unrelated to study treatment Thirty-nine subjects (90.7%) have reported at least 1 non-serious AE, for a total of

307 unique AEs The maximum severity of AEs has been Grade 1/Grade 2 (275 of 307 events

[89.6%]) or Grade 3/Grade 4 (32 of 307 events [10.4%])Of the 32 Grade 3/Grade 4 events,14 events in 6 subjects (all in Part B) were

assessed to be related

Table 1. Grade 3, Grade 4 and Serious Adverse Events, regardless of attribution, in patients who received ≥ 1 dose of cobomarsen in Parts A and B (N=43). SOC PT = System Organ Class Preferred Term

Table 2. Most common AEs reported in ≥ 10% of patients who received at least one dose of cobomarsen (N=43), either as monotherapy or in addition to stable doses of background therapy (combo).

Cobomarsen (MRG-106) miR-155-5p InhibitorCobomarsen is a chemically synthesized, phosphorothioate oligonucleotide, 14 nucleotides in

length, that contains a mixture of deoxyribonucleotides and 2'-O, 4'-C-methylene-β-d-ribonucleotides (LNA)Genome-wide expression analysis demonstrates that cobomarsen regulates numerous genes

implicated in cell cycle and apoptosis, consistent with the pharmacologic impact on cell survivalA subset of these genes has been identified as potentially translatable biomarkers to monitor

cobomarsen activity in clinical samples

Role of MicroRNA-155 in CTCLEpigenetic alterations have been implicated in the pathogenesis of lymphomas and leukemias

including CTCL.miRNA profiling and RT-PCR discriminate CTCL and non-malignant inflammation with high

accuracy.miR-155 is overexpressed in CTCL skin lesions and is involved in tumor progression JAK/STAT, NFB and PI3K signaling pathways are regulated by miR-155 and are activated in

CTCL leading to uncontrolled clonal cell expansion

A) Log2 fold-change in gene expression for drug or saline treatment vs. pretreatment for each individual biopsy. Shown are 122 genes regulated in the same direction by MRG-106 in all 4 lesions. Red = increased expression relative to the median for all samples; blue = decreased expression relative to the median for all samples. B) Cobomarsen tissue concentration detected by mass spectrometry in each biopsy. BLOQ = below the level of quantitation for the assayC) The individual lesion Composite Assessment of Index Lesion Severity (CAILS) score was obtained by adding the severity score of each of the following categories: erythema, scaling, plaque elevation, and surface area. The maximum score achievable is 50. The change over time in CAILS scores (normalized to 100% at baseline) is presented graphically. D) VDJ Sequencing (T Cell Repertoire) completed at Adaptive Biotechnologies to identify oncogenic clone frequency for biopsies collected for Part A subjects pre-treatment or post MRG-106 treatment on Day 9, 24 hours after the last dose. Clonality quantitates the extent of mono- or oligoclonal expansion by measuring the shape of the clone frequency distribution. Values range from 0 to 1, where values approaching 1 indicate a nearly monoclonal population.

Five of Eight (63%) Subjects Treated with Cobomarsen Administered as a 300 mg IV-infusion Achieved a PR; 50% Reached an ORR4

normalskin

pre-tx biopsies

Part A

post-txbiopsies

Part A

pre-txbiopsies

Part B

post-txbiopsies

Part B

post last treatment

(16 to 36 days)

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

14003000

3250

3500

miR

-155

cop

y nu

mbe

r/10

pg R

NA

LLOQ

miR-155 Detection Decreases in Lesion Biopsies After Cobomarsen Treatment

Figure 3. mSWAT score represents best score achieved while on study for 36 patients who had evaluable mSWAT scores as of the data cutoff (09JAN2019). Duration of response (days) as of 09JAN2019 for each evaluable patient achieving a 50% reduction in mSWAT score is shown in individual bar. NE = Not Evaluable; patients not allowed to continue on trial as per protocol or lost to follow up.

Subgroup of 122 mRNAs were modulated in common in lesion biopsy after cobomarsen treatment compared to a pre-treatment biopsy from the same lesion (Figure 2A)

Modulated pathways include decreases in gene expression in key CTCL disease pathways (PI3K/AKT, JAK/STAT and NFB pathways) as well as increased gene expression in pathways involved in apoptosis

The common gene signature correlates with cobomarsen concentration in the lesions (Figure 2B)

All evaluable Part A lesions directly injected with cobomarsen had improved CAILS scores (Fig. 2C) and decreased tumor cell clones when assessed by TCR sequencing on Study Day 9 (Figure 2D)

Pretreatment miR-155-5p expression levels quantitated by qPCR were elevated in the majority of CTCL patients compared to normal skin

Highest levels of miR-155 were found in tumor lesions that had the highest density of neoplastic cells

Intralesional and systemic cobomarsen treatment led to loss of miR-155 detection in the majority of subjects that was maintained up to 36 days post the last dose (EOS visit)

Figure 2

Cobomarsen has Similar Efficacy when Administered as Monotherapy or in Combination with Stable Regimens of Other CTCL Systemic Therapies

Concomitant medication

N Median time (min, max)on therapy prior to study day 1

bexarotene 12 12 months (2, 37)

interferon-alfa 2 24 months (16, 31)

methotrexate 2 20 months (20, 20)

other* 6 13 months (3, 112)

Quality of Life Improved as Measured by Skindex-29 Total ScoreSkindex-29 total score: maximal improvement and mean

improvement throughout the duration of study (Figure 7)Quality of life (QOL) improvement occurs mostly in patients that

received > 6 doses of cobomarsen

Figure 7. Skindex-29 total scores: maximal % change from baseline (green bars) and mean % change across the duration of study (grey bars); evaluable patients (n=17) are those who had a baseline measure and participated in Part B of the study.

No Evidence of Immunosuppression in Subjects Treated with Cobomarsen for up to 23 Months

Figure 1. The absolute cell count was determined by CBC for neutrophils A), and by flow cytometry for the major lymphocyte populations, B) B cells, C) NK cells, D) CD8 T cells, E) CD4 T cells, and F) CD4+CD25+ T regulatory cells. The graphs depict fold change from baseline (C1D1) in cell count. The average fold change was calculated per cohort, legend indicates number of patients per cohort.

Figure 4. miR-155-5p copy number in lesion biopsies taken before and after cobomarsen treatment from CTCL subjects enrolled in Parts A and B compared to normal skin biopsies from healthy donors

Figure 5. A) % change in mSWAT score represents best score achieved while on study for the 8 subjects in the 300 mg IV-infusion cohort. Duration of response (days) is indicated by the number below the bar for subjects achieving a PR as of 09JAN2019. NE = Not evaluable. B) Lesion photographs taken at baseline and over the course of cobomarsen treatment from subject 112-001 in the 300 mg IV-infusion cohort.

Figure 6. Percent change from baseline mSWAT score represents best score achieved while on study for subjects treated with cobomarsen as monotherapy (n=14) or in combination with other CTCL systemic therapies (n=22).

A B

Open-label, dose-ranging, multiple dose, study of intra-tumoral, subcutaneous, and intravenous administration of cobomarsen, an oligonucleotide inhibitor of microRNA miR155-5p, in subjects with CTCL, MF sub-type.

Primary Objective To investigate the safety and tolerability of

multiple intra-tumoral (IT), subcutaneous (SC), and intravenous (IV) administrations of cobomarsen

Secondary Objectives To characterize the pharmacokinetic profile,

the recommended Phase 2 dose and route, and to evaluate the efficacy of cobomarsen in this population

Main Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria Biopsy proven MF, Clinical Stage I-III, Large

Cell Transformation included Subjects refractory to or intolerant to

established therapy. Subjects could remain on stable doses of background therapy

No evidence of clinically meaningful visceral, nodal or blood involvement related to CTCL

No clinically significant laboratory, cardiac, renal, hepatic, or other medical conditions

Part AIntra-tumoral delivery of cobomarsen

75 mg dose

CobomarsenPlacebo

Pretreatmentbiopsy

Placebobiopsy

Cobomarsen biopsy

Part B Systemic administration by subcutaneous (SC)

injection or 2-hour IV infusion at 300, 600, or 900 mg or IV bolus (300 mg only)

Loading dose (3x/week) for 1 week followed by weekly dosing

Pretreatmentbiopsy

Disease assessments Monthly Composite Assessment of Index

Lesion Severity (CAILS) and Modified Severity Weighted Assessment Tool (mSWAT)

Clinical signs and symptoms, safety laboratory, ECG, adverse event monitoring

CT scans and flow cytometry at screening and when all criteria for a CR are met

Monthly Quality of Life

CLINICAL TRIAL SUBJECT FLOW

Acknowledgements and Disclosures

BACKGROUND

PART A (n = 6) PART B (n = 37) TOTAL (n = 43)

AEs (SOC PT) SAE Grade 3/4 SAE Grade

3/4 SAE Grade 3/4

Neutropenia* 5 5Lymphopenia 1 1 2Hypophosphotemia 1 1 2Leukopenia 2 2Hyperuricaemia 2 2Hypertriglyceridaemia 2 2Tumor flare 2 2Cellulitis 1 1 1 1Sepsis 1 1 1 1CPK increased 1 1Hypercalcemia 1 1 1 1Hypokalaemia 1 1Hyponatraemia 1 1Angina Pectoris 1 1 1 1Coronary artery disease 1 1 1 1Tumor pain 1 1Erythema 1 1Pruritus 1 1Rash 1 1Skin infection 1 1 1 1Acute kidney injury 1 1Palpitations 1 1 1 1Orthopnoea 1 1

TOTAL 3 5 5 27 8 32

Screened = 51

Enrolled = 43

Part A: Intra-lesional

Enrolled = 6

Completed = 5Discontinued due to SAE = 1

Part B: Systemic

Enrolled=37

Received > 6 systemic doses per amended

protocol N = 25

All systemically treated, excluding a Sezary patient

N = 36

Ongoing = 4; Completed = 11Discontinued = 20

Lost to FU = 1

Screen failures = 8Enrollment closed, missed deadline = 1

Did not meet I/E criteria = 7

Excluded from efficacy analysis due to I/E

(Sezary Sx) = 1

Part A(Intra‐

tumoral)

N (%)

Part B(Subcutaneous)

N (%)

Part B(IV, 2 hr infusion)

N (%)

Part B(IV Bolus)

N (%)

Total

N (%)

Demographic75mg(6)

300mg(3)

600mg(3)

900mg(3)

300mg(8)

600mg(8)

900mg(3)

300mg(9)

Total(43)

SexFemale 1 (17) 1 (33) 1 (33) 0 (0) 3 (38) 2 (25) 1 (33) 5 (56) 14 (33)Male 5 (83) 2 (67) 2 (67) 3 (100) 5 (63) 6 (75) 2 (67) 4 (44) 29 (67)

Age Range18 ‐ 45 0 (0) 0 (0) 2 (67) 0 (0) 2 (25) 0 (0) 1 (33) 0 (0) 5 (12)46 ‐ 65 6 (100) 3 (100) 1 (33) 3 (100) 5 (63) 6 (75) 1 (33) 4 (44) 29 (67)> 65 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (13) 2 (25) 1 (33) 5 (56) 9 (21)

AgeN 6 3 3 3 8 8 3 9 43Mean (SD) 59 (6) 57 (6) 41 (21) 62 (3) 52 (16) 62 (10) 59 (13) 65 (14) 58 (13)Median 61 59 41 64 53 59 63 70 59Min, Max 50,64 50,61 21,62 59,64 28,75 53,85 45,70 47,84 21,85

RaceAsian 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (13) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (2)Black 1 (17) 0 (0) 1 (33) 0 (0) 2 (25) 2 (25) 0 (0) 1 (11) 7 (16)Not reported 1 (17) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (2)Other, specify 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (33) 1 (13) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 2 (5)White/Caucasian 4 (67) 3 (100) 2 (67) 2 (67) 4 (50) 6 (75) 3 (100) 8 (89) 32 (74)

EthnicityHispanic 1 (17) 0 (0) 0 (0) 1 (33) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 2 (5)Non‐Hispanic 5 (83) 3 (100) 3 (100) 2 (67) 8 (100) 8 (100) 3 (100) 9 (100) 41 (95)

AE Table Worst Grade Occurring >= 10% of SubjectsMono vs Combo Therapy Subjects

Preferred TermMono n (%)

(18)Combo n (%)

(25)Total n (%)

(43)Fatigue 5 (28) 6 (24) 11 (26)Neutropenia* 1 (6) 7 (28) 8 (19)Pruritus 3 (17) 4 (16) 7 (16)Nausea 2 (11) 5 (20) 7 (16)Headache 4 (22) 3 (12) 7 (16)Tumor flare 2 (11) 5 (20) 7 (16)Injection site pain 2 (11) 4 (16) 6 (14)Constipation 4 (22) 2 (8) 6 (14)Diarrhoea 3 (17) 2 (8) 5 (12)Blood creatine     phosphokinase 

increased 2 (11) 3 (12) 5 (12)Back pain 2 (11) 3 (12) 5 (12)Upper respiratory tract   infection 2 (11) 3 (12) 5 (12)

*Other medications include single patients on pralatrexate, methoxsalen, brentuximab, gemcitabine, gamma interferon or romidepsin

*Neutropenia is transient, mostly in subjects on concomitant medications that had Grade 1-2 neutropenia at baseline.

Subject 112-001: 300 mg IV-inf

A B

C D

E F

none 1 tx-100

-75

-50

-25

0

25

50

Greatest mSWAT score improvement ofsystemically-treated subjects (N=36)

% c

hang

e fro

m b

asel

ine

concomitant systemic med for CTCL

n=14 n=22

300 mg 600 mg 900 mg

113-0

0210

2-011

112-0

0610

1-009

102-0

1411

2-001

102-0

0710

7-003

-100

-90

-80

-70

-60

-50

-40

-30

-20

-10

0

10

Cha

nge

in m

SWA

T Sc

ore

(%)

300 mg IV-inf

*

* Treatment is ongoing

ORR4 ORR4 ORR4

214

582393

148NE

Stage:# doses rec'd: 1317 779 2611 34 27

IBIB IBIIB IAIIB IB IB

ORR4

106-

002

101-

003

111-

001

106-

001

105-

002

102-

004

101-

002

105-

003

102-

005

108-

001

113-

001

113-

002

108-

003

112-

008

105-

005

103-

002

112-

003

102-

011

108-

002

112-

006

101-

009

102-

008

102-

009

102-

014

112-

001

102-

007

107-

003

112-

004

105-

004

106-

003

111-

002

112-

005

104-

001

103-

001

101-

004

102-

010

-100

-90

-80

-70

-60

-50

-40

-30

-20

-10

0

10

20

30

Bes

t Cha

nge

in m

SWA

T Sc

ore

(%)

300 mg

600 mg

900 mg

Subcutaneous IV BolusIV Infusion

* treatment ongoing

*

*

# doses rec'd:baseline mSWAT: 6 9103 43 20 58 178 595172 47 43 180278222 6 13271 662 54856 11 86 1878100 18332018 178 54

560

126

68

NENE

495

214

582

39315

435

7

18148

52

NE

stage: IIA IB IA IIB IIBIBIA IIAIBIIB IB IIB IIIAIIB IIB IB IB IB IIB IBIIB IIB IB IB IB IB IA IA IIB IIA IB IIIB IIA IIA IB IB

79 2629 77276 566 85 41 2796663 119 910 336 6106 11 5 3212 9 137 176 14 34

148