Aadi Bioscience’s Fyarro is on track to fail a phase 2 solid tumor trial, leading the biotech to halt the study and lay off 80% of its R&D workforce.
The company had been investigating the approved mTOR inhibitor, also known as nab-sirolimus, in the midstage PRECISION1 study in mTOR inhibitor-naïve malignant solid tumors harboring TSC1 or TSC2 inactivating alterations. But Aadi revealed yesterday that the independent data monitoring committee had decided the trial was unlikely to hit its key goal—namely exceeding an efficacy threshold necessary to support an accelerated approval.
It marks a significant setback for Aadi’s wider hopes for Fyarro, the only drug in its pipeline. Only two weeks ago, the California-based company had been suggesting that the data from PRECISION1 had “the potential to demonstrate a meaningful impact on the lives of patients who have already received standard therapies appropriate for their tumor type and stage of disease.”
"We are humbled by the effort of the investigators, support staff, and most importantly, the patients and their families who took part in PRECISION1,” Aadi CEO Dave Lennon said in the post-market Aug. 20 release.
“While nab-sirolimus showed monotherapy activity in the study population, the trial fell short of delivering what we believe would be required to support an accelerated approval in the broad TSC1/TSC2 inactivating mutations indication,” Lennon added. “We look forward to providing the full trial analysis at a later date.”
Aadi has also been evaluating Fyarro in two other phase 2 studies for difficult-to-treat mTOR-driven cancers: neuroendocrine tumors of the lung, gastrointestinal tract and pancreas; and advanced or recurrent endometrioid-type endometrial cancer in combination with Novartis’ Femara.
While Aadi is halting the PRECISION1 trial, it said it will continue dosing patients in the neuroendocrine tumor and endometrial cancer studies, although it will stop enrolling new patients. With 10 and 20 patients enrolled in those studies, respectively, Aadi thinks it has enough participants to assess the drug’s efficacy later this year.
In relation to this decision, the biotech will lay off 80% of its R&D staff. Fierce has asked Aadi how many employees are set to be impacted.
The company had $78.6 million to hand as of the end of June, when it anticipated the money would last into the final months of 2025. The combined pipeline and head count changes announced yesterday are expected to extend the company’s cash runway into “at least” the second half of 2026, it said.
As well as “preserving cash” by canning or halting enrollment in its remaining Fyarro trials, Aadi said its other primary focus will be “maximizing its commercial business” through sales of Fyarro in its approved indication of perivascular epithelioid cell tumor. These sales brought in $6.2 million for the company in the second quarter.