Endoxifen for MBD and breast cancer prevention
In June 2016, Atossa began investigating endoxifen as a potential treatment for breast cancer. When dosed orally, tamoxifen is metabolized in the liver by enzymes (including cytochrome P450 isoforms) into multiple metabolites, yet only a few of these metabolites have an active estrogen receptor (ER) antagonist effect (blocking estrogen from binding to its receptors). The most significant of these metabolites (in terms of ER antagonism contribution and plasma concentration in patients with normal tamoxifen metabolism) are endoxifen (4-hydroxy-N-desmethyltamoxifen) and, to a lesser extent, afimoxifene (4-hydroxytamoxifen).,
Atossa has since secured drug manufacturing supply, developed topical and oral formulations and filed composition of matter and methods of treatment patent applications (with patent lives potentially into 2036). The company now sees two separate cancer-prevention opportunities for endoxifen as a treatment to prevent cancer recurrence in patients refractory to tamoxifen; and, more recently, as a topical treatment to reduce mammographic breast density (MBD).
Topical treatment could provide targeted efficacy with lower AE
A topical formulation of endoxifen, if it can deliver significant targeted amounts of drug to breast tissue with minimal systemic absorption, could potentially play a meaningful therapeutic role by providing the local ER antagonistic therapeutic activity associated with tamoxifen, while reducing the risks of systemic adverse events (AE) associated with the oral drug.
Atossa believes that the optimal potential market for topical therapy (to delivery ER inhibition with less AE risk than oral drug) would be for the treatment of MBD. Breast tissue consists of lobules (glands), ducts, and fatty and fibrous connective tissue; generally, dense breast tissue has higher quantities of fibrous or glandular tissue and less fat content. For most women, breasts become less dense with age. According to the Breast Imaging-Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS) defined by the American College of Radiology (ACR), there are four degrees of breast density composition.
Exhibit 2: Breast density composition categories (BI-RADS categories)
Type |
Description |
A |
The breasts are almost entirely fatty |
B |
There are scattered areas of fibroglandular density |
C |
The breasts are heterogeneously dense, which may obscure small masses |
D |
The breasts are extremely dense, which lowers the sensitivity of mammography |
Description |
The breasts are almost entirely fatty |
There are scattered areas of fibroglandular density |
The breasts are heterogeneously dense, which may obscure small masses |
The breasts are extremely dense, which lowers the sensitivity of mammography |
Source: American College of Radiology
Tamoxifen is the only known approved prescription product that has been unequivocally shown to reduce breast density, but due in part to the risks for AE (including thromboembolic complications), it has not generally been employed for this purpose. Some studies suggest that oral acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) or other anti-inflammatories may reduce MBD too, but other studies have not found such an association, and, further, prolonged oral use can cause longer-term side effects so these products may not be recommended for women to help reduce their breast cancer risk.
Recent studies link high breast density with cancer risk
A topical treatment with tamoxifen-like effects for reducing MBD and possibly few side effects could have a meaningful chemo-preventative market, given that a recent US study following over 202,000 women found that MBD is a significant independent predictor for increased breast cancer risk. The study examined multiple criteria in addition to MBD, including first-degree family history of breast cancer, body mass index, history of benign breast biopsy, and age at first childbirth. Among these, the study found MBD was the most prevalent risk factor for both premenopausal and postmenopausal women. It found that 39.3% of premenopausal and 26.2% of postmenopausal breast cancers could potentially be averted if all women with heterogeneously or extremely dense breasts (BI-RADS C or D) shifted to scattered fibroglandular breast density (BI-RADS B).
Phase I topical endoxifen data show safety and early signs of absorption
In September 2017, Atossa reported positive results from the topical administration arm of its Phase I safety study conducted in Australia on endoxifen. In addition to assessing safety and tolerability, the placebo-controlled, repeat-dose, 28-day study on healthy female volunteers (aged between 18 and 65) evaluated the pharmacokinetics (PK) of both an oral and a topical endoxifen formulation. The study consisted of six cohorts (comprising eight patients each; where six would take the treatment and two would take placebo), with the first three cohorts (totaling 24 patients) receiving a topically-administered endoxifen formulation (in the form of a single-dose “sachet”) applied to the breast daily (dose arms of 1mg, 3mg, and 5mg/breast). The subsequent three cohorts (also totaling 24 patients) received an oral endoxifen capsule formulation.
The topical arm of the study was successful as there were no clinically significant adverse safety events in all tested dose treatment arms, and the product was tolerated at each dose level and for the duration utilized in the study. In all arms, there were no safety signals observed in weekly assessments of blood chemistry, coagulation or hematology parameters, or urinalysis, cardiac signs or other physical exam. There were no serious AE, but one subject in the placebo arm and one in the treatment arm experienced a treatment emergent AE of moderate severity and possibly drug-related (relating to headache and/or nausea).
In terms of tolerability, a self-assessment of local tolerance was performed daily (24 subjects for 28 days for a total of 672 daily assessments) where each participant would self-assess for five tolerability parameters (redness, burning, pain, itching and irritation) on a four-point scale (none, mild, moderate or severe). Based on these assessments, 97.3% of the self-reported measures were suggestive of no tolerability issues, 1.8% reflected mild and 0.2% moderate issues (there were no severe readings, and 0.6% of measures were N/A).
When examining the participants who did report at least one episode of a mild or moderate tolerability event (none of the patients had reported a severe event), both the low and medium dose cohorts reported fewer patients having experienced at least one episode than the placebo arm; this suggests that these doses were well tolerated. Only in the higher treatment arm was the total number of subjects having a tolerability event (4/6 or 67%) higher than those in the placebo arm (3/6 or 50%).
Exhibit 3: Atossa Genetics Phase I topical endoxifen study tolerability data
Dose cohort |
Dose (mg per breast) |
Number of participants reporting at least one tolerability event* |
Low (n=6) |
1 |
2 (33%) |
Medium (n=6) |
3 |
1 (17%) |
High (n=6) |
5 |
4 (67%) |
All receiving placebo (n=6) |
N/A |
3 (50%) |
Source: Atossa Genetics reports. Note: *Consisting of mild or moderate occurrences over the 28-period of itching, pain, redness, burning or irritation. None of the participants reported a severe score on any of these symptoms at any point in the study
In addition, each dose arm and all patients receiving placebo were asked on a weekly basis, whether the tolerability side effects (such as the five mentioned parameters) experienced through the use of the topical product had bothered the patient in an in-person interview.
Exhibit 4: Topical Phase I interview data on whether patients felt bothered by product
Dose cohort |
Not at all |
A little bit |
Somewhat |
Very much |
Low |
100% (6/6) |
0% |
0% |
0% |
Medium |
100% (6/6) |
0% |
0% |
0% |
High |
50% (3/6) |
2/6 (33%) |
1/6 (17%) |
0% |
Placebo |
83% (5/6) |
1/6 (17%) |
0% |
0% |
Source: Atossa Genetics reports
In the low (1mg/breast) and intermediate (3mg/breast) treatment arms, all participants (six for each arm) reported “not at all” across the measures. In the high treatment arm (5mg/breast), 50% of participants consistently reported “not at all” but two out of six (33%) reported being “a little bit” bothered by the adverse events, and one of six (16.7%) reported being “somewhat” bothered by such effects.
Across the placebo arm (n=6), five out of six (83%) reported “not at all” consistently, and one participant (16.7%) reported “a little bit” bothered. Overall, the tolerability data in the study appear very favorable for the low and intermediate arms, as these arms appear to perform equally or comparably to placebo on tolerability scales. The high arm could be trending to a slightly lower level of overall tolerability, although it is premature to speculate as to whether this would have an impact on this dose’s overall suitability in future studies.
Early pharmacokinetic (PK) data suggestive of dose-response effect
The Phase I data suggested that endoxifen may cross the skin barrier when applied daily to the breast, as measureable blood endoxifen levels increased in a dose-dependent manner. The therapeutic premise would be that the formulation would be placed on the skin surface and penetrate afterwards, with endoxifen reaching breast tissue and exerting a therapeutic effect by binding ER (retarding the potential for cancer cell growth and/or reducing density growth) in the region, with some proportion of the endoxifen being absorbed by the vascular structure and reaching systemic circulation. Hence, measures on whether plasma endoxifen would rise after topical administration could be a reference marker for the ability to reach local breast tissue.
The company reported that each of the patients (in treatment and placebo arms) were subject to an equal number of blood draws for the purpose of measuring plasma levels of endoxifen. In the draws, it measured the number of samples taken where the Ievel of plasma endoxifen was measured at or above 2ng/mL. In the placebo arm, as expected, there were no measures reaching this threshold; in the treatment arms, there was dose-related increase in the taken samples reaching the threshold: two in the 1mg/breast arm, seven in the 3mg/breast arm and 11 in the highest dose arm.
However, from this data it is challenging to estimate the actual significance of this dose-response effect, since the mean plasma level per group was not disclosed, the number of blood draws taken per patient or per treatment arm was not disclosed, and the relationship between therapeutic efficacy (in terms of reducing breast density) and the plasma endoxifen levels resulting from a topical breast administration has not been established at all.
Normally 2ng/mL systemically would not be significant enough to have a meaningful treatment effect for an orally dosed product (studies have shown that 15nmol/L or about 6ng/mL, is the ideal dose level for anti-cancer effect for oral product). However, the principle here is that the product will reach local breast tissue before reaching systemic circulation, so this measure may not be clinically meaningful for a topical administration.
Phase II endoxifen study planned for Q118
Atossa plans to initiate a Phase II study on endoxifen in Q118 at the Stockholm South General Hospital in Sweden (affiliated with the Karolinska Institute). Atossa recently submitted an application with the Swedish regulatory authority. The placebo-controlled, double-blinded study intends to enroll up to 480 subjects, and the primary endpoint is MBD reduction, which will be measured after six and 12 months of dosing, as well as safety and tolerability. Patients with BI-RADS grades B, C and D will be included in the study.
The larger study size (compared to the Phase I) will entail higher R&D costs for Atossa in 2018 (we estimate $3.0m in costs for the Phase II topical endoxifen study), and we expect completion in early 2019. We assume that upon study completion, Atossa will out-license the endoxifen program (both the topical and oral forms) and be entitled to 20% royalties on net sales.
As tamoxifen has a long-established history of systemic use, and as endoxifen is a metabolite of this drug (and with a similar “active moiety”), we expect that Atossa (or the eventual endoxifen licensee) would be able to pursue FDA approval through the 505(b)2 registration pathway, whereby the extent of efficacy data needed for registration is less substantive or onerous than through a traditional New Drug Application, or 505(b)1, pathway. This should shorten the amount of time needed for a registration study. We expect the pharmaceutical partner (licensee of endoxifen) would then fund the pivotal study (to start in H119), and that topical endoxifen would, in a best case scenario, achieve commercial approval and start sales in 2021.
Initial forecasts for topical endoxifen
The premise for a topical treatment with few AE to reduce MBD could potentially represent a significant market if it shows efficacy, given the relationship between MBD and cancer risk. As over 95% of breast cancers occur in women above age 40, and 65% of these have a mammogram every two years (as per US Centers for Disease Control data), we estimate that 10% of this collective group will fall within the highest category of MBD (BI-RADS grade D) and would represent the potential treatment target market. The firm plans to also assess topical endoxifen in lower grades of MBD (namely BI-RADS grades B and C), but our forecasts assume that it will primarily be used in grade D; the extension of commercial product use to patients with lower (less dense) MBD categories could provide upside to our estimates. Based on our preliminary discussions with management, and our view of a realistic or feasible treatment protocol, we assume that a potential endoxifen therapy would require a course of daily therapy for up to several months (after which MBD would be reduced for a certain period). Afterwards, we assume a course of MBD reduction therapy may need to be repeated every five years (as MBD may re-develop gradually once treatment is discontinued).
Based on the above assumptions, and assuming a peak market share of 10% of the target market, in the year of peak sales (2025), about 160,000 women would obtain therapy. We assume a starting net price per treatment cycle of $2,400 (consistent with our existing yearly oral endoxifen estimate) in 2021, and thus total US sales in 2026 of $523m (and worldwide sales of $922m). Assuming a 20% royalty rate to Atossa, this translates to royalties of $184m in 2026.
Exhibit 5: Topical endoxifen revenue forecasts
Year-end 31 December |
2021 |
2022 |
2023 |
2024 |
2025 |
2026 |
US market |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Estimated population of women above age 40 (000)* |
92,915 |
94,141 |
95,561 |
97,003 |
98,466 |
99,952 |
High breast density proportion (%)** |
10 |
10 |
10 |
10 |
10 |
10 |
Proportion with mammography test in past 2 years (%) |
65 |
65 |
65 |
65 |
65 |
65 |
Estimated number of years between treatment cycle |
5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
5 |
Market share (%) |
1.1 |
2.5 |
4.9 |
8.3 |
12.6 |
15.0 |
Number of patients undergoing treatment at year-end |
12,683 |
30,777 |
61,069 |
104,094 |
160,871 |
194,906 |
Net price per treatment cycle ($) |
2,400 |
2,479 |
2,528 |
2,579 |
2,630 |
2,683 |
Total topical endoxifen revenue ($000) |
7,724 |
76,377 |
154,529 |
268,628 |
423,360 |
522,911 |
Royalty rate (%) |
20 |
20 |
20 |
20 |
20 |
20 |
Net revenue to Atossa ($000) |
1,545 |
15,275 |
30,906 |
53,726 |
84,672 |
104,582 |
Europe and ex-US markets |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total topical endoxifen revenue ($000) |
5,902 |
58,360 |
118,076 |
205,261 |
323,493 |
399,560 |
Royalty rate (%) |
20 |
20 |
20 |
20 |
20 |
20 |
Net revenue to Atossa ($000) |
1,180 |
11,672 |
23,615 |
41,052 |
64,699 |
79,912 |
Worldwide topical endoxifen sales ($000) |
13,625 |
134,737 |
272,605 |
473,889 |
746,853 |
922,471 |
Worldwide topical endoxifen royalties to Atossa ($000) |
2,725 |
26,947 |
54,521 |
94,778 |
149,371 |
184,494 |
Source: Edison Investment Research. Note: *Based on US Census data.**Estimated prevalence of BI-RADS Class D is over 7% in patients above age 40 according to Sprague BL, Gangnon RE, Burt V, et al. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2014 Oct; 106(10). We assume a proportion of patients within BI-RADS Class C may also be considered as having high MBD. This explains our assumption that 10% of women above age 40 (who undergo periodic mammography testing) could be potential MBD treatment candidates.
Oral Phase I data show safety and dose-dependent PK
Results from the 24-patient oral arm of the Phase I study testing doses of 1mg, 2mg and 4mg/day were released on 25 October 2017. Healthy females (eight patients per arm, with six receiving drug and two receiving placebo) received drug for 28 days. Safety and tolerability was favorable as there were no serious AEs in any arm, and no safety signals (using the same parameters assessed in the topical arm) were identified. AEs deemed probably related to study drug were infrequent and included vomiting, delayed menstruation and hot flush, but there were no differences in the frequencies of such AEs in the study dose (and AEs also occurred in the placebo arm). Tolerability was assessed using a questionnaire on whether patients were bothered by treatment, using a five-point scale. Tolerability responses were similar at all dose levels and comparable with placebo, although one of the six patients in the 1mg arm reported a 5 out of 5 in her level of “bother” at day 21 (no other patient, across all treatment arms, reported a level above 3 out of 5 at any reported period).
In terms of PK, Atossa believes that 30nmol/L is an ideal minimum target level of plasma endoxifen to ensure possible therapeutic effect. Exhibit 6 shows 24-hour plasma endoxifen levels after a single oral administration (for all oral dose arms and placebo). Both the 2mg and 4mg oral doses led to sustained plasma levels in excess of 30nmol/L until at least 24 hours post-administration. A more important study parameter is “steady-state” plasma endoxifen concentration after multiple doses, which is shown in Exhibit 7. These data show that after 21 days of daily dosing, all three treatment arms led to plasma endoxifen levels well in excess of 30nmol/L, and the plasma concentration was dose-dependent (39.8nmol/L for the 1mg/day arm, rising to 187.8nmol/L for the 4mg/day arm). A larger Phase II oral endoxifen study, planned by Atossa to start in Q118, should provide more comprehensive PK data across a larger sample, but the PK data to date from the Phase I study are encouraging, given the increased levels of plasma endoxifen shown and the dose-dependent manner of such increases.
Exhibit 6: Single-dose pharmacokinetics (Oral study)
|
Exhibit 7: Pseudo-steady state levels: 21-day sample
|
|
|
|
|
Exhibit 6: Single-dose pharmacokinetics (Oral study)
|
|
|
Exhibit 7: Pseudo-steady state levels: 21-day sample
|
|
|
Pivotal oral study under 505(b)2 could start in H119
As with topical endoxifen, we believe the oral formulation would also be eligible for the 505(b)2 registration pathway and, as such, a Phase III trial demonstrating oral endoxifen’s efficacy in reducing cancer recurrence may not be necessary for approval. Beyond the currently planned Phase II study, we assume that an additional (pivotal) study would be required for approval of the oral drug, and we believe it would start in Q418 or H119, and could lead to approval in 2020. We believe Atossa will partner its oral and topical endoxifen formulation with a pharma company in 2019and we model that it will be entitled to 20% in net royalties. In terms of product safety and possible interactions, we note that some researchers have found that endoxifen, due to its effects on the protein kinase C (PKC) signaling system, can potentially have a therapeutic effect for treating patients with mania or bipolar disorder. Other groups have found similar effects with tamoxifen as it also inhibits PKC; hence we do not believe the PKC effect is likely to hinder endoxifen’s commercial or regulatory prospects.
NCI/Mayo Clinic group activity on endoxifen could provide competition
A team of investigators at Mayo Clinic (Matthew Goetz, Matthew Ames and collaborators) and the National Cancer Institute (NCI) is studying its own formulation of endoxifen hydrochloride in treating patients with ER+ breast cancer (but negative for HER receptors). While Atossa is filing patents for its own endoxifen formulations and methods of treatment, there is a material risk that competing studies from the Mayo/NCI investigators, should they lead to registration or commercialization-stage end products, could lead to intellectual property (IP) related competition challenges to Atossa’s eventual endoxifen product.
Oral endoxifen peak revenue assumptions unchanged
Based on findings from Madlensky and Fox, we continue to assume that 20% of the 300,000 US women (and approximately one million women worldwide) currently taking tamoxifen do not achieve sufficient plasma endoxifen concentrations, and thus reflect the potential target market for Atossa’s oral endoxifen (thus 60,000 persons in the US), and that peak market share for Atossa’s product would be 50% of this group, which would be attained within five years of launch (2025). There may also be a market for patients who refuse oral tamoxifen due to the drug’s side effects, but we do not factor this into our forecasts (as it is still unknown whether oral endoxifen would have fewer significant AEs than oral tamoxifen). As we model a starting net price of $200/month for the drug on launch (in 2020), we expect peak sales in 2025 of $91m and $161m in the US and worldwide, respectively, which, at our 20% assumed royalty rate, leads to global net royalties of $32m to Atossa in 2025.
We reiterate that there is the potential for some variability in our market size estimates. A study on 279 Polish women taking tamoxifen found that nearly 60% of these had endoxifen concentrations below the predefined threshold of therapeutic efficacy.