Astra bets on an EGFR future beyond Tagrisso
Already boasting the standard of care in EGFR-mutant lung cancer in the blockbuster drug Tagrisso, AstraZeneca has its eyes on the future. A deal with the private US biotech Pinetree Therapeutics could give the big pharma company rights to a degrader molecule targeting EGFR; at present this unnamed project is at the preclinical stage, but Astra has been sufficiently impressed to take out an option over a future licensing deal, worth $45m in up-front and “near-term” payments. Targeted protein degradation is a hot drug development modality, and though little is known about Pinetree’s approach the company has patented the use of neuropilin-1 (NRP1) to trigger internalisation and lysosomal degradation of proteins of interest. A search of OncologyPipeline reveals a few other EGFR degraders in development, perhaps the most notable of which is BG-60366, a Protac degrader that BeiGene says it hopes to take into phase 1 this year. Pinetree raised $23.5m in a series A round in mid-2022.
EGFR degraders in development
Project | Company | Internalisation trigger | Phase |
---|---|---|---|
HSK40118 | Haisco Pharmaceutical | None (E3 ligase recognition) | Ph1 in EGFRm NSCLC |
BG-60366 | BeiGene | None (E3 ligase recognition) | Starts ph1 in 2024 |
HJM-561 | Jing Medicine | None (E3 ligase recognition) | Preclinical (NB specific for EGFR C797S) |
C-09066 | Cyrus Therapeutics | Unclear | Preclinical |
Unnamed | Pinetree (AstraZeneca option) | NRP1 | Preclinical |
Unnamed | EpiBiologics | CD71 | Preclinical |
Source: OncololgyPipeline.
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