Starton Therapeutics Announces Approval to Proceed with Final Dose Escalation in Phase 1 Clinical Study Evaluating STAR-LLD

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May. 22, 2022

Starton Therapeutics Inc., a clinical stage biotechnology company announced today that the Independent Data Monitoring Committee reviewed the totality of the safety data from the first two cohorts and recommended advancement to the third- and final dose escalation, where subjects will receive the highest infusion strength of STAR-LLD.  The ongoing Phase 1 STAR-LLD clinical trial is evaluating continuous delivery lenalidomide in healthy subjects. Eight subjects in the first two cohorts received 24 hours of STAR-LLD continuous lenalidomide, and a single oral dose of lenalidomide after a 24 hour washout period.

“The Phase 1 study evaluated STAR-LLD bioavailability, safety, and pharmacokinetics,” said Jamie Oliver. Chief Medical Officer. “Progressing to the final dosing interval marks a major milestone in our development program; this study has established the compatibility and utility of the continuous infusion device with our subcutaneous formulation. Lenalidomide has been an effective immunomodulatory drug in hematologic malignancies for years, however adverse events, notably neutropenia, have limited its use in certain patient settings. We believe STAR-LLD may be able to expand the use of lenalidomide where the oral form is not used today.”

The company previously announced that the upcoming Phase 1b/2 clinical study in multiple myeloma is on track to begin enrollment in Q4 2022 at three already identified sites in the European Union. Starton continues to plan to submit additional regulatory applications in the US and other countries to accelerate the Phase 1b/2 as part of its development approach for STAR-LLD.

Pedro Lichtinger, Chairman and CEO, said, “The planned Phase 1b/2 clinical study is expected to establish efficacy in multiple myeloma; based on the response rates observed in our preclinical studies we believe STAR-LLD will provide a highly efficacious treatment option in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma.”

STAR-LLD program: three delivery systems

Starton is pursuing three delivery systems for STAR-LLD, in addition to the subcutaneous ambulatory infusion under investigation in the ongoing Phase 1 clinical trial, the Company also has progressed with its transdermal adhesive patch development and development of a patch/pump on-body injector (OBI).

About The Phase 1 Clinical Trial

The clinical trial is a Phase 1 study to evaluate the 24-hour bioavailability, safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of STAR-LLD in healthy human subjects. The study is an open-label, crossover design used to confirm the plasma concentrations of STAR-LLD versus oral lenalidomide  that will be further evaluated in a randomized Phase 1b/2 study in patients with multiple myeloma. STAR-LLD uses an ambulatory continuous subcutaneous infusion pump to deliver Starton’s proprietary solubilized lenalidomide in a continuous low dose delivery rather than once-a-day (QD) oral dose. The implication of this precise control is the maintenance of adequate and efficacious drug levels over the entire dosage interval. Starton’s previous in vivo studies found a 77% reduction in plasma lenalidomide exposure using a continuous subcutaneous infusion versus pulsatile dosing at the daily oral equivalent.

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