A Phase II Trial of Avutometinib in Combination With Defactinib in Metastatic Diffuse Gastric Cancer

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

Trial Details

Sponsor: Ryan H. Moy, MD, PhD (other)

Phase: 2

Start date: Oct. 28, 2024

Planned enrollment: 27

Trial ID: NCT06487221
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More trial details at ClinicalTrials.gov More info

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Investigational Drug AI Analysis

chevron Show for: Defactinib (PF-04554878, VS-6063)

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

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Goal: Evaluate whether the combination of avutometinib (RAF/MEK inhibitor) and defactinib (FAK inhibitor) improves progression-free survival and antitumor activity, and characterize safety in metastatic diffuse-type gastric cancer.

Patients: Adults (≥18) with unresectable/metastatic gastric or gastroesophageal junction carcinoma of diffuse, poorly cohesive, signet ring cell, or mixed histology; or tumors harboring pathogenic CDH1 and/or RHOA mutations irrespective of histology. Must have received at least one prior line for advanced disease including platinum and fluoropyrimidine, ECOG 0–1, adequate organ and cardiac function, measurable or evaluable disease per RECIST 1.1, and tumor amenable to fresh biopsy. Key exclusions include recent systemic therapy, prior FAK/MEK/KRAS-specific inhibitors, significant ocular disease (including RVO risk), uncontrolled cardiovascular disease, active CNS disease requiring steroids, active viral hepatitis or HIV requiring therapy, and significant drug–drug interaction risks (strong CYP3A4/2C9, P-gp, BCRP modulators).

Design: Single-arm, open-label, phase II study with non-randomized allocation; planned enrollment of 27 participants.

Treatments: Avutometinib 3.2 mg orally twice weekly, 3 weeks on/1 week off, combined with defactinib 200 mg orally twice daily, 3 weeks on/1 week off. Avutometinib is a first-in-class dual RAF/MEK inhibitor that allosterically clamps RAF–MEK complexes, inhibiting RAF and MEK and preventing compensatory MEK reactivation; it has shown activity across RAS/RAF/MEK-driven tumors. In recurrent low-grade serous ovarian cancer, avutometinib plus defactinib achieved an overall response rate around 28% with a high disease control rate and manageable toxicity (notably CPK elevation, fatigue, diarrhea). Defactinib is a second-generation FAK/Pyk2 inhibitor targeting tumor cell signaling and the microenvironment; single-agent activity has been modest, with current development emphasizing rational combinations including with MAPK pathway inhibitors and immunotherapy.

Outcomes: Primary: 6-month progression-free survival rate. Secondary: overall response rate by RECIST 1.1, median PFS, median overall survival, disease control rate, and duration of response. Time-to-event endpoints measured from treatment start; imaging per RECIST 1.1.

Burden on patient: Moderate. The regimen uses oral agents on a 3-weeks-on/1-week-off schedule, limiting infusion visits, but requires baseline and on-treatment safety labs, ECGs, and echocardiography/MUGA for cardiac monitoring, ophthalmologic assessments due to MEK-associated ocular risks, and mandatory fresh tumor biopsy or ascites paracentesis at baseline. Regular radiographic assessments per RECIST are expected approximately every 8–12 weeks. Patients must manage concomitant medication restrictions to avoid drug–drug interactions, and potential adverse events (CPK elevation, diarrhea, fatigue, hepatic enzyme changes) may necessitate additional labs and visits. Travel burden centers on biopsy procedures, imaging, and periodic safety monitoring rather than frequent pharmacokinetic draws or inpatient stays.

Last updated: Oct 2025

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Columbia University Irving Medical Center

New York, New York, 10032, United States

[email protected] / 212-342-5162

Status: Recruiting

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