A Phase 2 Study of VS-6766 (Dual RAF/MEK Inhibitor) Plus Defactinib (FAK Inhibitor) in Recurrent Gynecological Cancers (DURAFAK)

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Investigational drug late phase More information Active drug More information Moderate burden on patient More information

Trial Details

Sponsor: University of Oklahoma (other)

Phase: 2

Start date: Feb. 6, 2023

Planned enrollment: 55

Trial ID: NCT05512208
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More trial details at ClinicalTrials.gov More info

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Investigational Drug AI Analysis

chevron Show for: Avutometinib (RO-5126766, CKI-27, CH-5126766, R-7304, RG-7304, VS-6766)

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Goal: Evaluate the antitumor activity and safety of the combination of the dual RAF/MEK inhibitor avutometinib (VS-6766) plus the FAK inhibitor defactinib in recurrent gynecologic cancers enriched for MAPK-pathway alterations.

Patients: Adult women (≥18 years) with recurrent or progressive gynecologic cancers, including endometrioid carcinoma, mucinous ovarian carcinoma, high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma, or other solid gynecologic cancers, harboring RAS mutation or activation, BRAF (class I–III) mutation, and/or NF1 loss-of-function. Prior systemic therapy for metastatic disease is required; measurable disease by RECIST 1.1 and ECOG 0–1 are mandated. Key exclusions include prior RAF or MEK inhibitor exposure, low-grade serous ovarian cancer, uncontrolled CNS disease, significant ocular or cardiac comorbidity, active hepatitis/HIV requiring therapy, strong CYP/P-gp drug interactions, and inability to swallow oral medications.

Design: Single-stage, exploratory, multicenter, open-label, parallel-cohort Phase 2 study without randomization.

Treatments: Avutometinib (VS-6766) plus defactinib, both oral. Avutometinib is a first-in-class dual RAF/MEK inhibitor that functions as a RAF/MEK clamp, allosterically inhibiting RAF and MEK and stabilizing inactive RAF–MEK complexes to prevent MEK rephosphorylation, thereby limiting pathway rebound seen with MEK-only inhibitors. Across early trials, the combination with defactinib has demonstrated clinically meaningful activity in MAPK-driven tumors, including a reported 28% response rate in recurrent low-grade serous ovarian cancer and high disease control rates, with a manageable safety profile characterized mainly by CPK elevation, fatigue, and diarrhea. Defactinib inhibits focal adhesion kinase (FAK), potentially augmenting MAPK-pathway inhibition by impacting tumor/stroma signaling and adhesion pathways.

Outcomes: Primary: Confirmed overall response rate (RECIST 1.1) by investigator. Secondary: safety and tolerability (AEs, SAEs, labs, physical exams, dose modifications), duration of response, progression-free survival, disease control rate (CR+PR+SD ≥8 weeks), and overall survival.

Burden on patient: Moderate. Therapy is entirely oral but requires adherence to intermittent dosing and compliance with frequent clinic visits for safety labs, vitals, physical examinations, ECGs, and periodic echocardiogram/MUGA for cardiac monitoring. Baseline and archival or fresh biopsy tissue is required for molecular confirmation, which may necessitate a procedure if recent tissue is unavailable. Routine imaging per RECIST, likely every 8–12 weeks, and monitoring for ocular, CPK, hepatic, and renal parameters add visit and testing frequency beyond typical standard-of-care for recurrent disease. Travel demands are consistent with a Phase 2 targeted-therapy study without intensive pharmacokinetic sampling or inpatient stays.

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Sites (3)

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AdventHealth

Orlando, Florida, 32804, United States

[email protected] / 407-303-8251

Status: Recruiting

University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center

Albuquerque, New Mexico, 87131, United States

[email protected] / 505-925-0460

Status: Recruiting

Stephenson Cancer Center

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 73117, United States

[email protected] / 405-271-8777

Status: Recruiting

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